Fintech · Brazil
Key Facts
—The decree. President Lula signed Decree 13.033 on June 19, letting the state freeze and ultimately seize the money of illegal betting operators.
—The targets. The government says it has flagged 37 financial firms, mostly fintechs and payment companies, moving cash for illegal betting.
—The scale. Since 2025, roughly 50,000 illegal betting sites have been blocked, tied to about 350 operators.
—The liability. A separate order makes banks and fintechs jointly liable for unpaid taxes if they keep processing illegal-bet payments after being warned.
—The market. Officials estimate that 41 to 51 percent of betting in Brazil still happens outside the regulated market.
—The destination. Seized funds are routed to the National Public Security Fund to fight organized crime.
Brazil has changed tactics against illegal betting, moving from blocking websites to choking the payment rails that move the money, and it has put fintechs squarely in the firing line.
For two years Brazil has tried to tame a booming betting market by blocking websites. The trouble is that blocked sites simply reappear under new names the next day.
So the government has switched targets.
Instead of chasing web addresses, it is now going after the money, and the payment firms that move it.
What the illegal betting decree does
On June 19, President Lula signed Decree 13033, which lets the state freeze and eventually confiscate the funds of unlicensed betting firms.
The official finance-ministry release calls the approach “financial asphyxiation,” a phrase borrowed from the war on organized crime.
The mechanics are quick. When the Finance Ministry’s betting regulator flags an illegal operator, banks and payment firms must freeze the linked accounts within twenty-four hours and stop new transactions.
The institutions then have forty-eight hours to confirm they have complied. Brazil’s central bank oversees the process, and any money finally declared forfeit goes to the National Public Security Fund to fight organized crime.
The tools were borrowed from Brazil’s fight against criminal gangs. They became possible after Congress passed the so-called Anti-Faction Law, and the decree applies the same money-choking logic to betting.
Why fintechs are now in the frame
The sharpest part is who gets named. The finance minister, Dario Durigan, said about 350 illegal operators relied on 37 financial firms, mostly fintechs and lightly supervised payment companies.
A second order, published days earlier, raises the stakes for those firms. It makes banks and fintechs jointly liable for the taxes an illegal operator fails to pay, if they keep processing its payments after a warning.
The message to the payments industry is blunt. Keep moving money for an unlicensed bet after being told to stop, and you can be billed for its unpaid taxes.
That is a meaningful change of incentive. Compliance teams at payment firms now have a direct financial reason to screen out illegal operators, not just a reputational one.
The Rio Times reads this as the real shift. Brazil is treating the payment layer, not the website, as the choke point, and turning fintechs from neutral pipes into gatekeepers with legal exposure.
Why it matters for investors
The prize is large because the grey market is huge. The government estimates that between forty-one and fifty-one percent of all betting in Brazil still runs outside the licensed system.
Officials also cite figures suggesting millions of Brazilians use illegal platforms, with the losses running into the tens of billions of reais each year. Those numbers come from the government’s own presentation and are hard to verify independently.
For licensed operators, the crackdown is welcome. They pay tax and follow rules, and have long complained that offshore rivals undercut them with none of the cost.
For the payments sector, the read is more cautious. Brazil’s fast-growing fintech industry now carries a fresh compliance burden, and the firms that move betting money will need tighter checks on who they serve.
The wider pattern is a state learning to police a digital economy through its plumbing.
By leaning on banks, the central bank and payment firms, Brazil is regulating betting the way it polices money laundering.
Enforcement will be the test.
The rules are tough on paper, but blocked operators have always found new routes.
The payment industry will also push back on how far its duty to police clients should stretch, and where the line of reasonable diligence sits.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Brazil’s new illegal betting decree do?
Signed on June 19, Decree 13033 lets the government freeze and ultimately seize the funds of unlicensed betting operators. Banks must freeze flagged accounts within twenty-four hours, and seized money goes to a public-security fund.
How are fintechs affected?
The government named 37 financial firms, mostly fintechs and payment companies, as movers of illegal-bet money. A separate order makes banks and fintechs jointly liable for an operator’s unpaid taxes if they keep processing its payments after a warning.
Why does this matter beyond Brazil?
It shows Brazil policing a digital market through its payment system rather than by blocking websites, a tactic that keeps failing. For investors, it adds compliance risk to one of the world’s fastest-growing fintech sectors.
In depth
Brazil inflation, Selic and rates 2026
Fintechs and digital banks in Brazil 2026
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