India has entered a new regulatory phase for online gaming as the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act, 2025, along with its rules, comes into force on May 1, 2026. The framework bans all online money games and introduces a structured system for regulating esports and social gaming.
The government has set up the Online Gaming Authority of India (OGAI) under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). The authority brings together representatives from multiple ministries. It will classify games, oversee compliance, handle grievances, and coordinate enforcement across agencies.
The Centre has also expanded enforcement powers. Designated cyber cell officials at the state, district, and police station levels can now investigate violations. This creates a wider enforcement network across jurisdictions.
Clear legal separation in gaming formats
The law draws a firm distinction between permitted and banned formats. It prohibits all online money games. This includes any game that involves entry fees, stakes, deposits, or monetary rewards that users can withdraw or convert outside the platform. The ban applies regardless of whether the game depends on skill or chance.
Esports and online social games remain legal as long as they do not involve monetary stakes. Some categories may still require registration based on government notification or OGAI orders.
The OGAI will classify games based on revenue models, gameplay structure, and monetisation features. It will also check whether in-game assets can be converted into real-world value. These decisions must follow a set timeline, usually within 90 days.
Registration and compliance system
The framework introduces a registration system for eligible platforms. Approved games will receive a digital certificate valid for up to 10 years, subject to compliance. However, online money games cannot be registered as esports.
Registered platforms must follow strict rules. They must disclose registration details, appoint compliance officers, maintain data records, and follow regulatory directions, especially on payments.
Payment gateways must also verify registration before processing transactions. This step strengthens financial oversight in the sector.
User safety and grievance system
The rules place strong emphasis on user protection. Platforms must add age checks, parental controls, time limits, fair play systems, and grievance tools. They must also clearly inform users about these features.
A two-step grievance system now applies. Users must first approach the platform. If they remain unsatisfied, they can escalate the issue to OGAI within 30 days. A final appeal goes to the Secretary of MeitY. Each stage follows fixed deadlines.
Enforcement and penalties
Enforcement will run digitally and must finish within 90 days. Authorities will decide penalties based on violation severity, financial gains, repeat offences, and user harm. Corrective action by companies will also be considered.
The government aims to reduce risks linked to real-money gaming while giving clarity to legitimate operators. It also wants better coordination between regulators, banks, and enforcement agencies.
India’s online gaming sector now moves into a tightly controlled framework. Real-money gaming has ended, while esports and social gaming continue under stricter rules. The industry is no longer unregulated. It now operates under a clear legal boundary.





























