Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has signed Complementary Law No. 224/2025 into effect, implementing a gradual tax increase on sports betting operators that will raise the rate on gross gaming revenue (GGR) from 12% to 15% by 2028.

The legislation, published in a special edition of the Diário Oficial da União, marks a significant shift in how Latin America’s largest gambling market taxes its operators.
KEY FACTS AT A GLANCE
- Law: Complementary Law No. 224/2025
- Signed By: President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
- Current Tax Rate: 12% on GGR
- Final Tax Rate: 15% on GGR (by 2028)
- Implementation: Gradual increase starting 2026
- Revenue Allocation: Social security and healthcare initiatives
- Senate Vote: Approved 62-6
- 90-Day Rule: New taxes take effect after constitutional waiting period
Phased Tax Implementation Timeline
The tax increase will be implemented gradually over three years, giving operators time to adjust their business models. Under Brazil’s constitution, any new or increased taxes are subject to a 90-day waiting period from the date of publication before taking effect.
2025 (CURRENT)
12%
Current GGR tax rate. Operators retain 88% after deductions.
2026
13%
1% increase. Operators retain 87%, 1% to social security.
2027
14%
2% increase. Operators retain 86%, 2% to social security.
2028 (FINAL)
15%
3% increase. Operators retain 85%, 3% to social security.
Revenue Allocation Structure
Complementary Law No. 224 fundamentally restructures how betting tax revenues are distributed. The new allocation formula prioritizes social programs while maintaining operator viability.
| Allocation | Percentage (2028) | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Operator Retention | 85% | Operating and maintenance costs |
| Public Initiatives | 12% | Designated government programs |
| Social Security | 3% | Half allocated to healthcare programs |
The law also introduces joint tax liability for entities that advertise illegal betting sites, as well as financial institutions and payment companies that do business with unlicensed operators—a measure designed to choke off revenue streams to the black market.
Lower Than Originally Proposed
The final 15% rate represents a compromise from earlier proposals. In early December, the Senate’s Economic Affairs Committee approved PL 5,473/2025, which set out an 18% rate for operators by 2028. The lower rate in the final legislation was seen as a small victory for the gambling industry.
TAX RATE COMPARISON
Originally Proposed (PL 5,473/2025)
- 18% GGR tax by 2028
- Approved by Senate Economic Affairs Committee
- Higher burden on operators
Final Law (CL 224/2025)
- 15% GGR tax by 2028
- Passed Senate 62-6
- Gradual implementation over 3 years
Brazil’s Booming Gambling Market
The tax increase comes as Brazil’s regulated gambling market experiences explosive growth. The Secretariat of Prizes and Betting (SPA) confirmed gross gaming revenue of R$17.4 billion ($3.2 billion) in just the first six months of 2025, with 17.7 million active bettors participating in the regulated market.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| 2025 Projected Market Revenue | $7.02 billion |
| H1 2025 GGR | R$17.4 billion ($3.2B) |
| Active Bettors (H1 2025) | 17.7 million |
| Annual Market Volume | ~R$120 billion |
| Fully Licensed Operators | 66 |
| Authorized Brands | 182 |
| Tax Revenue to State (Oct 2025) | R$3.8 billion (~€685M) |
| Projected 2029 Market Size | $9.04 billion |
The Ministry of Finance confirmed that 66 companies received full licenses to operate, with an additional 52 granted provisional licenses. Major international operators like Bet365, Betfair, and SportingBet secured their licenses, while prominent names such as PixBet and SportsBet.io failed to meet requirements.
Industry Concerns and Warnings
Despite the lower-than-expected final rate, the gambling industry has expressed concerns about the cumulative tax burden and its potential to drive activity to unlicensed operators.
“The intention is to curb the proliferation of illegal and dishonest gambling that exploits the vulnerabilities of the population, especially those with low incomes, and to expand the contribution that betting houses make to society.”
— Congressman Aguinaldo Ribeiro
The Brazilian Institute for Responsible Gaming warned that the measure could undermine regulatory goals and strengthen illegal competition. Approximately 30% of the Brazilian betting market still operates offshore, and since October 2024, the National Telecommunications Agency has taken down over 15,000 illegal betting websites.
ADDITIONAL TAX CONCERNS
Many in the licensed sector are also fearing a potential tax on player deposits. The Senate plenary has approved a 15% tax on player deposits to licensed platforms as part of a separate bill, though this measure requires further analysis before final approval. Legal expert Udo Seckelmann warned such a tax could risk dropping channelization to licensed platforms below 20%.
Player Tax Rates Remain at 15%
While operators face the GGR tax increase, player taxation remains stable. Net winnings from fixed-odds lottery bets are subject to a 15% Personal Income Tax (IRPF) rate—a significant reduction from the initially proposed 30% tax. The tax applies only to net winnings exceeding R$2,428.80 annually, with losses deductible against winnings. This approach mirrors how other countries handle gambling tax deductions.
Casino Legalization Remains Stalled
While online sports betting taxation moves forward, Brazil’s land-based casino legalization remains in limbo. The Senate rejected a request to fast-track Bill No. 2,234/2022, which would have legalized casinos, bingo halls, and the traditional numbers game known as “jogo do bicho.”
Lawmakers voted 36-28 against granting urgency to the bill during the chamber’s final deliberative session of 2025. The proposal will now follow the Senate’s ordinary legislative procedure, with no date set for a final vote. Strong opposition from evangelical lawmakers has been a key factor, with leaders warning they would publicly name legislators who supported the proposal.
Government’s Fiscal Motivation
President Lula has significant fiscal motivations for the tax increase. The government has announced R$300 billion in social spending planned for 2026 alone, and the gambling sector represents a growing revenue source. The first year of market activity has already returned approximately R$3.8 billion to the state as of October 2025.
Revenue from the newly created CIDE-Bets tax will be directed to the National Public Security Fund, with the levy expected to generate around R$30 billion ($5.5 billion) annually once fully implemented.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Gradual tax increase — GGR tax rises from 12% to 13% (2026), 14% (2027), and 15% (2028)
- Lower than proposed — Final 15% rate is below the 18% originally approved by Senate committee
- Social programs benefit — Half of tax increase goes to social security, half to healthcare
- 90-day constitutional rule — New rates take effect after mandatory waiting period
- $7 billion market — Brazil’s gambling market projected to reach $9 billion by 2029
- 66 licensed operators — 182 authorized brands now operate in the regulated market
- 30% still offshore — Industry warns higher taxes could strengthen illegal competition
- Casino bill stalled — Land-based gambling legalization rejected for fast-track, no vote date set