India's Online Gaming Rules to Take Effect May 1, 2026

The Indian government will enforce comprehensive rules to regulate the online gaming sector starting May 1, 2026. The framework, established under the PROG Act of 2025, aims to protect users from harm while fostering the industry's growth. A key component is the creation of the Online Gaming Authority of India, a digital-first regulator to oversee compliance and enforcement. The rules introduce a classification system for games and a conditional registration process for operators.

Key Points: India's New Online Gaming Rules Effective May 1, 2026

  • New rules under PROG Act 2025
  • Establishes Online Gaming Authority of India
  • Mandatory registration for high-risk games
  • 90-day classification for money vs. social games
3 min read

India online gaming rules to come into force from May 1

India's new PROG Act rules for online gaming, including a new regulatory authority and game classification system, will be enforced from May 1, 2026.

"protecting users -- especially children and vulnerable groups -- from financial and psychological harm, while positioning the country as a global hub for gaming - Government Statement"

New Delhi, April 22

India will bring into force a comprehensive set of rules to regulate the fast-growing online gaming sector from May 1, 2026, the government said on Wednesday.

The new framework, notified under the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming (PROG) Act, 2025, reflects the Centre's dual objective of protecting users -- especially children and vulnerable groups -- from financial and psychological harm, while positioning the country as a global hub for gaming and digital creativity.

Framed by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Rules, 2026 lay down the operational architecture for implementing the parent law, which was enacted by Parliament in August 2025. The rules were finalised after extensive inter-ministerial consultations and legal vetting, signalling the government's intent to bring clarity and regulatory certainty to an industry that has seen rapid growth alongside rising concerns over addictive and predatory money-based gaming platforms.

At the heart of the new framework is the establishment of the Online Gaming Authority of India, a digital-first regulator that will oversee classification, compliance, grievance redressal and enforcement.

Headquartered in New Delhi and functioning as an attached office of MeitY, the Authority will include representatives from key ministries such as Home Affairs, Finance, Information and Broadcasting, Youth Affairs and Sports, and Law and Justice.

It will maintain a central list of online money games, issue regulatory directions, and coordinate with financial institutions and law enforcement agencies to prevent illegal transactions linked to prohibited platforms.

The rules introduce a structured mechanism to determine whether a game qualifies as an online money game or a permissible online social game or e-sport.

This classification can be triggered either by the Authority itself, by applications from service providers, or through government notifications. Objective criteria such as the presence of stakes, expectations of monetary winnings, revenue models and the ability to monetise in-game rewards outside the platform will be used to assess games.

Determination is expected to be completed within 90 days, bringing time-bound clarity for industry stakeholders.

A key feature of the regulatory regime is a conditional registration system. Registration will be mandatory only for categories notified by the government based on risk factors such as user vulnerability, scale and financial exposure, and for all games seeking recognition as e-sports.

Approved games will receive a digital certificate valid for up to 10 years, while online money games will be barred from being recognised as e-sports under the National Sports Governance Act, 2025.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As a parent, I welcome this. My teenage son was spending hours and pocket money on some of these apps. A clear regulator and rules will help us know which platforms are safe. The distinction between money games and e-sports is crucial.
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Rohit P
Good move for the industry in the long run. Regulatory certainty attracts serious investment. Positioning India as a global gaming hub is a fantastic vision. Hope the Online Gaming Authority doesn't become another bureaucratic hurdle that stifles innovation with excessive red tape.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see India taking such a structured approach. The 10-year certificate validity provides good stability for developers. The coordination with finance ministries to track illegal transactions is a smart, practical measure.
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Vikram M
Implementation is key. We have great laws on paper but ground-level enforcement is often weak. Will this Authority have real teeth to act against offshore platforms that ignore the rules? Also, hope the classification process is transparent and not subjective.
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Kavya N
This is a balanced approach - protection for users and growth for the industry. Separating e-sports from gambling-like money games is essential for our athletes to compete globally with dignity. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

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