Key Takeaways
- Brazil’s legal gambling sector currently features 83 authorized operators, 29.4 million registered players, and has generated R$ 37 billion for public coffers
- Recent analysis indicates operator tax obligations may climb from 32% to 42% by 2033 as part of comprehensive fiscal restructuring
- Sector executives warn that modifying taxation frameworks after market entry could render business models economically unsustainable
- Escalating tax burdens risk driving bettors to unlicensed platforms, ultimately diminishing government tax collection
- An additional “selective tax” scheduled for 2027 implementation may compound financial pressure, despite concerns about its applicability to the betting sector
Brazil’s legitimized gambling sector stands at the precipice of a significant fiscal challenge that threatens to fundamentally alter the industry landscape before the decade ends.
The market, currently completing its second year of authorized activity, has demonstrated impressive performance metrics. Official records show 83 licensed gambling companies, 29.4 million engaged participants, and R$ 37 billion contributed to public finances.
However, fresh analysis conducted by LCA Consultoria at the request of the Brazilian Institute of Responsible Gaming (IBJR) suggests this momentum faces serious headwinds if taxation continues its upward trajectory.
The research forecasts that gambling operator tax obligations could surge from 32% to 42% by 2033. This escalation stems from Brazil’s sweeping fiscal modernization initiative, which eliminates legacy levies such as PIS/Cofins and ISS in favor of contemporary alternatives.
The replacement framework introduces IBS (Tax on Goods and Services) alongside CBS (Contribution on Goods and Services). These mechanisms could stack an additional 14 percentage points atop the Finance Ministry’s recommended 28% foundational rate.
Additionally, the social contribution assessment on sector earnings may expand from 13% to 15%, the analysis suggests.
Operators Sound Alarm on Economic Viability
Gambling companies already invested substantial R$ 30 million licensing fees to access the Brazilian marketplace. They now confront the reality of progressively mounting financial obligations beyond that considerable upfront commitment.
Plínio Lemos Jorge, who leads the National Association of Games and Lotteries (ANJL), emphasized that predictable regulatory conditions are critical for industry sustainability.
“Assuming the regulatory environment remains stable, current operations can persist, as this represents the foundation upon which businesses committed to Brazil,” he stated.
He delivered an unambiguous caution regarding the trajectory. “Should taxation escalate incrementally by 1% or 2%, eventually commercial operations become financially untenable. Enterprises invested in Brazil based on established parameters—altering these conditions retrospectively undermines that fundamental agreement.”
The apprehension extends beyond corporate profitability concerns. The fundamental question centers on whether authorized operations can maintain competitiveness against unauthorized platforms unburdened by equivalent obligations.
André Gelfi, director and co-founder of IBJR, referenced findings demonstrating that market legitimization delivers measurable fiscal advantages. “Our research revealed that each 5 percentage point advancement in market formalization could yield approximately R$ 1 billion in supplementary government revenue,” he explained.
Essentially, driving consumers toward unlicensed alternatives through excessive taxation may paradoxically diminish total government collections.
Selective Taxation Controversy
Compounding concerns is a forthcoming Selective Tax implementation planned for 2027. This levy, frequently characterized as a “sin tax,” would impose supplementary financial burdens on gambling operators.
Gelfi challenged this methodology, characterizing it as fundamentally flawed in its conceptualization of industry mechanics.
“Due to insufficient comprehension, policymakers seek to impose the framework utilized for state lottery systems onto betting operators,” he remarked.
Fixed-odds wagering functions through fundamentally distinct mechanisms compared with conventional lottery programs. Profit parameters are tighter and operational expenditures are substantially higher, rendering direct fiscal comparisons between these sectors fundamentally inappropriate.
Brazilian betting operators committed to the marketplace based on particular economic projections. The IBJR research cautions that the contemplated Selective Tax, when combined with comprehensive fiscal restructuring, could elevate aggregate obligations to thresholds that jeopardize legitimate operation sustainability by 2033.
