Australia’s gambling regulation shifted in 2026. The Gambling Reform Bill entered Parliament on 2 July 2026, bringing the country’s toughest-ever restrictions on gambling advertising – with the changes taking effect from 1 January 2027.
How the 2026 reforms affect players at GW Casino
Understanding the advertising rules around gambling does more than explain what you can and cannot see on TV. It tells you what standards licensed operators must meet, what rights you hold as a consumer, and where to go if something goes wrong. For players using GW Casino – which operates under a Curacao eGaming licence – knowing the difference between domestic and offshore regulation is particularly useful.
The 2026 reform package covers three areas beyond advertising: it strengthens BetStop (Australia’s national self-exclusion register), expands ACMA’s powers against illegal offshore operators, and funds new financial counselling services for people experiencing gambling-related hardship. Each of these affects GW Casino players directly or indirectly.
The Gambling Reform Bill 2026: scope and status
The Interactive Gambling Amendment (Gambling Reform) Bill 2026 was introduced to Parliament on 2 July 2026. It has been referred to the Environment and Communications Legislation Committee for review, with a report due by 17 August 2026. If passed in its current form, the main provisions commence on 1 January 2027 and roll out in phases over three years.
The bill amends the Interactive Gambling Act 2001 and the Broadcasting Services Act 1992. Its stated purpose is to break the connection between wagering and sport, minimise children’s exposure to gambling advertising, and reduce the volume of wagering ads across television, radio, and online platforms simultaneously.
Three schedules, three areas of change
The bill is structured across three schedules: Schedule 1 introduces advertising restrictions across all platforms, Schedule 3 upgrades the BetStop framework with stronger enforcement and new operator obligations, and Schedule 4 bans online keno-type lotteries and foreign matched lottery products. Each schedule operates independently and comes into force at the same time.
What changes from 1 January 2027: the full rules
The advertising restrictions in the bill are the most specific Australia has legislated in this space.
| Platform | New restriction from 2027 |
|---|---|
| Free-to-air TV (6am-8:30pm) | Maximum 3 gambling ads per hour |
| Free-to-air TV during live sport | Complete ban within those hours |
| Radio | No gambling ads weekdays 8am-9am and 3pm-4pm |
| Online platforms | Ads only to logged-in users aged 18+ who have not opted out |
| Sports venues and stadiums | All gambling advertising banned |
| Player and officials uniforms | Gambling brand sponsorship prohibited |
| Celebrities and athletes | Banned from appearing in gambling ads across all media |
| Odds-style advertising | Prohibited in all formats |
The jersey and venue sponsorship rules have an immediate commercial impact. Clubs across the AFL, NRL, and cricket have been informed they must remove gambling brand logos from playing kits. Operators like Sportsbet, Bet365, and Ladbrokes have invested heavily in these sponsorships, and all such arrangements end under the new rules.
The limits of the 2026 reforms
The government stopped short of a complete ban on gambling advertising, which was the recommendation of the 2023 parliamentary inquiry. Licensed operators can still advertise outside restricted hours and formats, and online platforms can show ads to opted-in adults. Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young criticised the compromise, arguing children are still awake after 8:30pm when TV ads resume. The debate over a full ban continues in Parliament.
Rules already in force before 2027
The 2027 provisions are not yet law, but existing restrictions from ACMA and the National Consumer Protection Framework already apply to all licensed gambling operators. These are active rules right now:
- No gambling ads during children’s TV programs at any time of day
- No gambling ads during live sport broadcasts between 6am and 8:30pm
- Mandatory responsible gambling messaging on all promotional material since 30 March 2023
- No odds-style advertising during live sport coverage
- Credit cards and cryptocurrency banned for licensed online wagering deposits since June 2024
ACMA actively enforces these rules. In June 2026, ACMA found SBS had breached gambling advertising rules during a live Tour de France broadcast. The regulator also blocked additional illegal gambling and affiliate marketing websites in June 2026 and has been escalating enforcement against influencers who promote unlicensed offshore operators.
The National Consumer Protection Framework and GW Casino
The NCPF is a set of nationally consistent standards for online wagering agreed by all Australian states and territories in November 2018. It applies specifically to Australian-licensed wagering operators and covers:
- No sign-up inducements such as first deposit bonuses for sports betting accounts
- Mandatory opt-out pre-commitment tools including deposit limits
- Consistent responsible gambling messaging across all advertising and promotional material
- Account verification completed within three days of registration
- No credit card or cryptocurrency for deposits
GW Casino holds a Curacao eGaming licence and operates outside the NCPF’s direct jurisdiction. This means some NCPF obligations do not apply to GW Casino in the same way they apply to domestic operators. However, GW Casino does provide deposit limits, self-exclusion, session alerts, and cooling-off periods within account settings – matching the spirit of the NCPF’s harm minimisation intent.
BetStop: what it is and how it works for GW Casino players
BetStop is Australia’s national self-exclusion register, operated by ACMA under Part 7B of the Interactive Gambling Act 2001. It launched in August 2023. By August 2024, over 28,000 Australians had registered, with 40% choosing a lifetime exclusion period.
Registering with BetStop blocks you from all Australian-licensed online and telephone wagering services in a single step – you do not need to contact individual operators. BetStop applies to Australian-licensed wagering services. GW Casino, as a Curacao-licensed platform, is not directly covered by BetStop obligations, but players can register with BetStop independently at betstop.gov.au to restrict access to all domestic licensed services at the same time as using GW Casino’s own self-exclusion tool.
BetStop upgrades proposed in the 2026 bill
The Gambling Reform Bill 2026 proposes the following changes to BetStop, taking effect from 1 January 2027 if passed:
- Seven-day cooling-off period before any deregistration takes effect
- Mandatory minimum three-month exclusion period for all registrations, including repeat ones
- Operators must close accounts of registered individuals within seven days and return all credit balances
- BetStop penalties increased by more than four times compared to current levels
- Fault elements removed from offences, lowering the evidence threshold for ACMA enforcement
Your consumer rights when playing at GW Casino
Australian consumer protection law provides rights that sit alongside gambling-specific regulation. These rights apply regardless of whether the casino you use holds an Australian licence.
| Right or protection | How it applies | Who enforces it |
|---|---|---|
| Fair terms and conditions | T&Cs cannot be unfair under Australian Consumer Law | ACCC |
| Privacy of personal data | Data covered by the Privacy Act 1988 for Australian-nexus entities | Office of the Australian Information Commissioner |
| Dispute resolution | Independent mediators such as Casino.guru and AskGamblers for offshore operators | Third-party mediators |
| Self-exclusion from domestic wagering | BetStop covers all Australian-licensed services | ACMA |
| Protection from illegal operators | ACMA blocks and prosecutes unlicensed sites targeting Australians | ACMA |
| Age verification | Must be 18+ – GW Casino requires KYC verification before first withdrawal | GW Casino / Curacao regulator |
GW Casino and its player protection approach
GW Casino holds a Curacao eGaming licence and publishes its responsible gambling tools directly within the account dashboard. These tools are self-service and take effect immediately – no support contact is required to activate any of them. Available controls include deposit limits, loss limits, session time alerts, cooling-off periods of 24 hours to 30 days, and permanent self-exclusion.
The platform uses 256-bit SSL encryption on all pages, certified RNG software across its game library, and publishes its terms and conditions publicly. GW Casino’s Curacao licence requires regular audits and documented player fund segregation. While it operates outside Australia’s domestic NCPF, its published safeguards cover the same areas that Australian regulation targets.
What GW Casino cannot do under its licence
GW Casino cannot knowingly serve players who are self-excluded through the platform’s own tools. It cannot accept deposits via credit cards for Australian players consistent with the broader regulatory trend. If you have questions about the casino’s specific licence obligations, the licence details are published in the footer of the GW Casino website.
Responsible gambling support: free resources for Australians
Every resource in the table below is free, confidential, and completely independent of GW Casino or any other operator.
| Service | Contact | What it provides |
|---|---|---|
| National Gambling Helpline | 1800 858 858 | Free 24/7 phone counselling |
| Gambling Help Online | gamblinghelponline.org.au | Free 24/7 chat and email support |
| BetStop | betstop.gov.au | Self-exclusion from all licensed wagering services |
| Lifeline | 13 11 14 | Crisis support including gambling-related distress |
| Financial Counselling Australia | 1800 007 007 | Help with gambling-related financial hardship |
The 2026 reform package includes additional government funding for specialised financial counsellors to help Australians dealing with gambling-related debt and hardship. This service is being delivered through the Department of Social Services and is free to access.