
Ireland has taken a major step in overhauling its gambling oversight framework after the government approved new powers for the Gambling Regulatory Authority of Ireland (GRAI), enabling it to begin issuing betting licences and enforcing compliance across the sector. The move marks the transition from long-standing legacy laws to a centralized regulatory system designed to reflect modern gambling practices.
The approval was formalized last week when Minister for Justice, Home Affairs and Migration Jim O’Callaghan signed an order connected to the Gambling Regulation Act 2024. That legislation created the GRAI as Ireland’s new national gambling regulator. Although the act was passed in October 2024, the authority only became operational as the official regulator in March 2025. With the latest order now in place, the GRAI can begin accepting and processing licence applications starting Thursday.
The licensing framework applies to both remote gambling activity, such as online betting, and land-based wagering carried out at physical premises. According to the government, the authority will be able to issue licences to new market entrants as soon as operationally possible. Remote gambling operators may receive licences from 1 July, while in-person operators can be licensed from 1 December, when their existing permissions are due to expire.
“Today marks another important step towards replacing Ireland’s outdated gambling laws with a streamlined and simplified licensing framework,” O’Callaghan said. “This reflects the nature of modern gambling and takes into account the harms associated with problem gambling, by providing safeguards to protect people from those harms, especially children.”