Key Points
- While prediction platforms such as Polymarket thrive in America, European authorities classify them as unlawful gambling and enforce blocks
- Nations including France, Germany, Netherlands, and others have implemented geoblocks or imposed financial penalties on Polymarket
- European users continue accessing these platforms via alternative domains and redirection services despite official restrictions
- Legal professionals in Europe propose reclassifying prediction markets as financial instruments rather than gambling operations
- Unlike the centralized US CFTC, Europe operates without unified oversight, resulting in inconsistent national regulations
The year 2024 witnessed remarkable growth for prediction markets throughout America. Services such as Polymarket enable participants to purchase and sell contracts based on actual events, spanning electoral outcomes to international developments.
Throughout America’s 2024 presidential race, Polymarket participants invested billions speculating on electoral results. The service accurately predicted the winner ahead of numerous conventional polling organizations.
However, European authorities have responded dramatically differently. Regulatory bodies throughout Europe have implemented measures to restrict prediction market access, categorizing these platforms as either unauthorized gambling operations or unregulated financial services.
France’s gaming oversight body, the Autorité Nationale des Jeux, examined Polymarket throughout 2024. The investigation determined the service potentially operates as unlicensed gambling. Subsequently, Polymarket restricted access for French residents.
French authorities cautioned that prediction market services “lack authorization within France and represent illegal gambling operations.” Officials additionally highlighted that these platforms demonstrate addiction-prone features comparable to internet gambling yet lack appropriate consumer protections.
Expanding European Restrictions
Germany, Belgium, Portugal, Switzerland, Romania, Netherlands, and Poland have implemented access restrictions against Polymarket. Every jurisdiction maintains the platform provides gambling without appropriate licensing.
Dutch authorities have demonstrated particularly strict enforcement. Netherlands legislation restricts licensed wagering exclusively to sporting events and equestrian racing. Markets covering electoral outcomes or alternative events exceed permitted boundaries.
Dutch regulatory authorities delivered a stop-operations directive to Polymarket during early 2024. Authorities warned the platform faced potential penalties reaching €840,000, approximately $994,000.
Despite regulatory obstacles, prediction markets maintain European presence. Usage statistics indicate European participants continue reaching platforms through mirror websites, forwarding services, and alternative access methods.
Ismail Vali, who leads RegTech organization Gaming Compliance International, noted enforcement rarely achieves complete effectiveness.
“When regulators block a single domain, operators don’t necessarily cease operations within that territory,” he stated.
Vali’s research indicates participants revisit prediction market holdings approximately 15 times hourly during the initial day following trade execution. This engagement level substantially exceeds traditional internet wagering patterns.
Financial Classification as Alternative Pathway?
Certain legal authorities believe prediction markets might operate within Europe if categorized as financial instruments instead of gambling services. German attorney Wulf Hambach proposed these products could potentially receive oversight from BaFin, Germany’s financial regulatory authority.
Nevertheless, Hambach emphasized that Polymarket’s operational model couldn’t transfer directly into German markets. Significant modifications would be necessary to satisfy national legal frameworks.
Europe confronts structural challenges absent in American markets. No single European institution regulates prediction markets comparable to America’s Commodity Futures Trading Commission oversight.
Former Entain chief executive Gavin Isaacs described this fragmentation as problematic. “The situation presents considerable complexity,” he stated, emphasizing that European nations apply divergent regulatory approaches.
Mark Davies, founding Betfair team participant, described current prediction market discussions as recognizable. Betfair’s exchange system introduced comparable functionality years earlier and encountered identical regulatory scrutiny.
Throughout 2024, prediction markets represented approximately 7.9% of unauthorized sports wagering revenue, per Gaming Compliance International analysis. Projections suggest this percentage will climb to minimally 10% during 2025.
