Is Online Betting Legal in India After PROGA?

⚡ Quick Answer

Under PROGA (Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act, 2025), all real-money online betting and gambling is banned in India as of October 1, 2025. Enforcement targets operators and platforms — not individual players. The law also faces a Supreme Court constitutional challenge that could overturn it. The full legal picture is complicated. Read on for the complete picture.

If you’ve tried logging into your favourite betting app recently and found it blocked — or heard that Dream11, MPL, and other platforms have shut down — you’re living through one of the most dramatic regulatory shifts in India’s digital history.

On August 22, 2025, the Indian Parliament passed the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act, 2025 — universally known as PROGA. It came into effect on October 1, 2025, and has reshaped the entire online gaming landscape in India overnight.

Over 7,800 websites have been blocked. Banks stopped processing transactions. Dream11, PokerBaazi, MPL, and Zupee suspended operations. A ₹23,000-crore (approximately $2.75 billion USD) industry went into freefall.

But here’s what most people want to know: what does this actually mean for you — the player? Are YOU breaking the law by placing a bet? Can you still access offshore sites? What happens next? This guide answers all of it, clearly and honestly.

⚠️ Legal Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws are actively being challenged and may change. Consult a qualified legal professional for advice specific to your situation.

1. What is PROGA? A Plain-English Summary

PROGA — the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act, 2025 — is India’s first comprehensive national law on online gaming. Before PROGA, regulation was left to individual states, creating a patchwork of different rules. Some states allowed skill-based games; others banned all gambling. Enforcement was inconsistent.

PROGA ended that era. It is a central law with overriding effect, meaning it supersedes all conflicting state laws. And its core position is stark: all online money games are prohibited — broadly defined as any online game involving real money stakes or prizes.

Key Dates to Know

Date What Happened
August 19, 2025 Cabinet approved the PROGA bill
August 20–21, 2025 Bill passed in both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha
August 22, 2025 Presidential assent — PROGA becomes law
October 1, 2025 PROGA enforcement comes into effect
October 12, 2025 Draft PROGA Rules 2025 released for public consultation (approx. 2,500 responses received)
January 21, 2026 Supreme Court scheduled to hear constitutional challenge — three-judge bench led by CJI Surya Kant
February 2026 7,800+ websites blocked; final PROGA Rules still pending formal notification

2. What Exactly is Banned Under PROGA?

PROGA defines “online money games” as any online game where a player pays or stakes money with the expectation of winning money or prizes. Under this definition, the following are all prohibited:

  • Sports betting — cricket, football, kabaddi, or any other sport
  • Online casinos — slots, roulette, blackjack, live dealer games
  • Fantasy sports platforms — Dream11, MPL Fantasy, My11Circle (all required to suspend paid contests)
  • Online rummy, poker, and teen patti for real money
  • Crash games — Aviator, JetX, and similar
  • Online matka and number-based betting
  • Any mobile app or website offering real-money wagering services

Critically, PROGA makes no distinction between games of skill and games of chance. This is one of its most controversial features — and a central argument in the Supreme Court challenge. Previously, skill-based games like rummy and fantasy sports had judicial protection. PROGA removes that protection entirely.

What is NOT Banned

  • E-sports — competitive multiplayer games recognised under the National Sports Governance Act, 2025 (with NOGC registration)
  • Social / casual games — games played purely for fun with no money at stake (Ludo, educational quizzes)
  • Stock market / trading platforms — Zerodha, Groww, crypto exchanges (not defined as online money games)
  • Physical horse racing betting — at licensed race clubs in Mumbai, Bangalore etc.
📌 Key Point: Even Dream11 — India’s largest fantasy sports platform with over 160 million users — had to shut down real-money contests. The ₹45,000-crore fantasy sports industry has been decimated. PROGA drew no distinction between “betting on a match” and “picking players based on stats.”

3. What Does PROGA Mean for Individual Players Like You?

This is the question millions of Indians are asking right now — and the answer has an important nuance most news coverage has missed.

Enforcement Targets Operators, Not Players

PROGA’s criminal penalties are aimed squarely at those who run, operate, promote, facilitate, or advertise real-money gaming platforms. The law does not explicitly criminalise the act of an individual placing a bet.

This is intentional regulatory design. With tens of millions of Indians who have historically participated in online betting, any attempt to prosecute players would create massive political and legal backlash. Enforcement agencies have explicitly stated they are pursuing operators, not end users.

Penalties Under PROGA (For Operators)

Violation Imprisonment Fine
Operating a real-money gaming platform Up to 3 years Up to ₹1 crore
Repeat violation Up to 5 years Up to ₹2 crore
Advertising / promoting real-money games Up to 3 years Up to ₹1 crore
Financial facilitation (banks, payment gateways) Civil penalties Subject to regulatory action
⚠️ Important: While individual players are not currently being prosecuted, the law’s extraterritorial clause (Section 2) technically extends PROGA’s reach to services “offered within the territory of India or operated from outside India.” This creates legal grey zones around offshore platform usage that have not yet been tested in courts.

4. Can Indian Players Still Use Offshore Betting Sites?

This is the most searched question post-PROGA — and the most legally complicated to answer. Here is the reality on multiple fronts:

The Numbers: Offshore Usage Has Surged

A December 2025 CUTS International survey found that offshore platform usage among Indian bettors climbed from 68.3% before the ban to 82% after the ban — a 20% relative increase. Daily sessions exceeding two hours also jumped dramatically, from 3.4% to 42.3% of users. The ban is driving people to less regulated alternatives.

What’s Happening Current Status (Feb 2026)
Government blocking offshore sites Active — 7,800+ sites blocked and counting
UPI / bank transactions to betting sites Technically prohibited; enforcement inconsistent
Prosecuting individual players No documented cases; enforcement targets operators
VPN usage to access blocked sites Legal grey area; VPNs themselves are legal in India
Crypto deposits to offshore sites Growing; largely unregulated but legally risky

The Blocking Reality

Offshore sites are targeted with domain blocks. However, operators respond with “URL switching” — rapidly migrating to new domains when old ones are blocked. This creates a constant cat-and-mouse situation. The sites keep coming back.

The Player Prosecution Reality

As of February 2026, there are no documented cases of individual Indian players being prosecuted for using offshore betting platforms. Many legal experts argue that prosecuting end users would be constitutionally problematic. However, this could change — particularly if offshore payment flows are traced to individual accounts.

5. The Supreme Court Challenge: PROGA May Not Survive

Here is the single most important fact that most reporting has buried: PROGA is facing a serious constitutional challenge — and multiple leading legal experts believe it may not survive scrutiny.

Why the Law is Being Challenged

The Federal Problem: Under India’s Constitution, “betting and gambling” falls under Entry 34 of the State List — meaning states, not the central government, have primary authority to regulate them. Critics argue PROGA unconstitutionally strips states of that power by imposing a blanket central ban.

The Article 19 Problem: Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution guarantees the right to practise any profession or carry on any trade or business. Courts had previously recognised skill-based games like rummy and fantasy sports as legitimate businesses. PROGA prohibits them without distinction.

The Skill vs. Chance Problem: For decades, Indian courts held that games of skill are constitutionally protected from blanket gambling bans. The Supreme Court itself ruled in K.R. Lakshmanan v. State of Tamil Nadu that skill-based activities have fundamental rights protection. PROGA ignores this distinction entirely.

What’s Happening in Court Right Now

The Supreme Court’s three-judge bench, led by Chief Justice Surya Kant, was scheduled to hear consolidated petitions on January 21, 2026. Petitioners include major gaming companies including Head Digital Works (operator of A23 Rummy), whose foreign investor Clairvest reportedly wrote off its entire ₹760-crore investment following the ban.

The case is constitutionally intertwined with the earlier “Gameskraft batch” of cases. The outcome could be transformative: a ban upheld, a ban struck down, or a mandated replacement regulatory framework.

🔴 Critical Update (Feb 2026): PROGA’s implementing rules have still not been formally notified — the government has missed multiple self-imposed deadlines. The law exists in an unusual state: signed into law and actively enforced, but technically not yet fully operative. Legal experts are closely watching whether the Supreme Court grants interim relief.

6. What Legal Experts Are Saying

Vidushpat Singhania — Managing Partner, Krida Legal

PROGA’s blanket prohibition treats all real-money games as prohibited “regardless of whether they involve skill or chance” — raising clear constitutional concerns including Article 19(1)(g) rights violations. India’s complete ban on real-money skill gaming is “unlikely to withstand constitutional scrutiny.”

Ranjana Adhikari — Partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas

Evidence from previous state-level bans shows that prohibitions “rarely eliminate demand but simply displace it towards illegal or unregulated platforms.” The offshore surge since PROGA appears to confirm this pattern precisely.

Amol Kulkarni — Research Director, CUTS International

Blocking websites may be a “temporary band-aid approach at best.” A holistic approach that regulates, educates, and enforces — rather than simply prohibiting — is more likely to achieve genuine consumer protection goals.

Dhruv Garg — Partner, IGAP

The Indian online betting market is conservatively worth $20 billion. At that scale, the tax evasion from the offshore shift exceeds $4 billion — larger than the total revenue of all Indian real-money gaming companies combined.

Category Examples Status
E-Sports BGMI, Valorant, FIFA tournaments (no money prize pools) ✅ Legal (with NOGC registration)
Social / Casual Games Ludo, Candy Crush, Carrom (no money stakes) ✅ Legal
Stock Market / Trading Zerodha, Groww, crypto exchanges ✅ Legal (regulated separately)
Physical Horse Racing Race clubs in Mumbai, Bangalore ✅ Legal (licensed clubs)
Online Horse Racing (Karnataka) Karnataka’s proposed online horse racing ⚠️ Unclear — conflicts with PROGA
Online Real-Money Betting Sports betting, casino, fantasy sports for money ❌ Banned under PROGA

8. Three Possible Futures for Indian Betting

🔴 Scenario 1: Ban Stays

Supreme Court upholds PROGA. Domestic industry stays shut. Offshore betting grows in the grey market. ₹23,000-crore industry’s tax revenue lost permanently to offshore platforms.

🟢 Scenario 2: Ban Struck Down

Court finds PROGA unconstitutionally encroaches on states’ rights. Power reverts to states. Skill-based platforms like rummy, fantasy sports resume quickly. Industry celebrates.

🔵 Scenario 3: Licensed Framework

Most likely outcome. Court mandates a nuanced regulatory approach — phased licensing under NOGC, consumer safeguards, responsible gaming requirements, and tax compliance built in.

💡 Bottom Line Prediction: Most legal experts expect the Supreme Court to find PROGA’s blanket ban — particularly its failure to distinguish games of skill from games of chance — constitutionally problematic. A full reversal is unlikely. A phased, licensed regulatory framework appears to be the most probable medium-term outcome.

9. Practical Guide: What Should Indian Players Do Right Now?

If You Want to Bet on Cricket or Sports

  • Domestic licensed options: None currently available for real-money sports betting under PROGA
  • Offshore sites: Accessible through VPN and mirror domains, but legally grey and financially risky
  • Payment methods: UPI/bank transfers to offshore betting sites are technically prohibited; crypto is being used as an alternative but also carries regulatory risk
  • Recommended approach: Wait for Supreme Court clarity before committing significant money to any offshore platform

If You Play Fantasy Sports (Dream11, MPL etc.)

  • Paid fantasy contests are suspended on all major Indian platforms
  • Free-to-play or social modes on some platforms may still be available
  • The Supreme Court ruling is directly relevant — a favourable judgment could see paid fantasy sports resume quickly

If You Play Online Casino Games (Slots, Rummy, Poker)

  • All real-money online casino games are banned under PROGA
  • The offshore surge is real, but payment disruptions and site blocking make it increasingly difficult
  • Social / demo versions of casino games are legal and available

If You Are a Responsible Gambler

  • If gambling has been a regular habit, the PROGA disruption is an opportunity to reassess
  • If you are accessing offshore sites through VPNs, be aware: offshore platforms have no consumer protections under Indian law
  • iCall helpline: 9152987821 — free psychological counselling available in India
  • Vandrevala Foundation 24/7 helpline: 1860-2662-345

10. Frequently Asked Questions

Is placing a bet online illegal for me personally in India?
Under PROGA, the offences are framed around operating, facilitating, advertising, and promoting real-money gaming platforms. There is no specific criminal provision targeting individual players for placing bets. As of February 2026, no individual players have been prosecuted. However, the law’s broad language and extraterritorial clause create a legal grey zone that has not yet been tested in courts.
Is using a VPN to access betting sites illegal in India?
VPNs are not banned in India. Using a VPN for legitimate privacy purposes is legal. However, using a VPN specifically to circumvent a government block to access a prohibited service is legally murkier. No player prosecutions for VPN use have been reported, but the risk of future enforcement cannot be ruled out.
What happened to Dream11 after PROGA?
Dream11, India’s largest fantasy sports platform with over 160 million registered users and a valuation of approximately $8 billion, suspended all paid contests following PROGA’s implementation. The platform is exploring restructuring options. The Supreme Court ruling could allow it to resume paid operations if PROGA’s ban on skill-based games is struck down.
Can I still access Bet365, 1xBet, or Rajabets from India?
These offshore platforms are among those targeted by India’s blocking orders. They continue to operate through mirror domains and VPN access, and some Indian users are still accessing them. However, payment processing is increasingly disrupted as banks block transactions. The legal and financial risks are real and growing.
When will we know if PROGA stays or is struck down?
The Supreme Court’s three-judge bench was scheduled to begin hearing PROGA challenges in late January 2026. The case is complex and may take several months to conclude. A definitive ruling could come in mid-to-late 2026, though interim orders providing relief to the industry are also possible at earlier stages.
Is horse racing still legal in India?
Physical horse racing at licensed race clubs (Mumbai, Bangalore, etc.) remains legal. Karnataka has proposed legalising online horse racing betting — a move that directly challenges PROGA’s authority and may signal broader state resistance to the central ban.

Conclusion: Legal Limbo, With Change Coming

India’s online betting landscape in February 2026 is best described as legal limbo. PROGA has imposed a sweeping ban, shut down a major industry, and driven millions of players to unregulated offshore platforms — achieving the opposite of its stated consumer protection goals.

The Supreme Court challenge is real and significant. Leading constitutional lawyers believe the law’s blanket approach, its failure to distinguish games of skill, and its encroachment on states’ powers make it vulnerable. A full or partial reversal is possible.

For Indian players right now: no criminal enforcement is targeting you personally. But the financial and legal risks of offshore platforms are genuine — no Indian regulatory protection applies to your funds on those sites. The wisest course is to watch the Supreme Court proceedings, stay informed, and exercise caution with any real-money activity until legal clarity emerges.

The final chapter of PROGA has not been written yet. Stay tuned.

📋 Sources & Accuracy Note: This article draws on reporting from Bar & Bench, iGaming Business, MediaNama, Storyboard18, Outlook Respawn, Asia Gaming Brief (AGB), Yogonet, Wikipedia (PROGA, 2025), CUTS International survey data, and official PROGA Act documentation (proga2025.in). Facts verified as of February 2026. Laws are actively evolving — verify current status before making any decisions. This is not legal advice.

🆘 Responsible Gambling: If gambling has affected your wellbeing or finances, please reach out. iCall (India): 9152987821  |  Vandrevala Foundation 24/7: 1860-2662-345  |  NIMHANS Bangalore: nimhans.ac.in. Help is available and you are not alone.