Australia’s gambling sector faces major AML shift as March 2026 deadline nears

Australia’s gambling industry is heading into its biggest anti-money laundering reset in more than a decade, with new obligations due to kick in on 31 March 2026 for existing “reporting entities” such as casinos, wagering operators, and other regulated gambling providers. The reforms were introduced as part of amendments to Australia’s AML/CTF laws and are designed to shift the regime away from box-ticking and toward clearer outcomes: identifying risk earlier, verifying customers sooner, and detecting suspicious patterns before they escalate into enforcement cases. Updated framework strengthens risk programs, customer identification checks, and ongoing monitoring The Department of Home Affairs states that the amended law updates AML/CTF program requirements to focus on identifying, assessing, and mitigating risks associated with money laundering, terrorism financing, and proliferation financing, rather than merely maintaining a compliance document. It also reshapes customer due diligence rules, including clearer triggers for enhanced checks and a stronger emphasis on ongoing due diligence throughout the life of a customer relationship, not just at the outset. Lower ID threshold for gambling customers One of the most practical changes for gambling is a lower threshold for when a provider can delay full customer due diligence. Home Affairs states that the amendments will lower the customer due diligence exemption threshold for gambling service providers from less than $10,000 to less than $5,000 for certain types of gambling services. Therefore, venues and operators can look to tighten onboarding flows, adjust limits and triggers, and ensure that staff and systems do not treat identification as a “later” step when transaction activity reaches the new threshold. AUSTRAC signals tougher enforcement AUSTRAC has spent the past year telling regulated sectors to prepare early, and its language on enforcement has been blunt. In an update to its regulatory expectations, the agency warned that businesses with weak controls or poor risk management “will continue to face regulatory action,” including civil penalty proceedings, and added: “Now is the time to act.” AUSTRAC has also released reform guidance aimed at helping both existing reporting entities and newly regulated sectors understand what changes and what stays in place until the March start date. AUSTRAC CEO Brendan Thomas has linked the reforms to a broader effort to close gaps that criminals exploit, stating that organised criminals “take advantage of gaps in the financial system anywhere they can find them.” Industry countdown to March With 31 March 2026 approaching, operators across retail and online wagering are already updating internal programs, retraining staff, and upgrading monitoring tools to match the new standards. AUSTRAC has also flagged that if a business cannot meet every new or changed obligation immediately, it expects a documented implementation plan that explains how risks will be managed during the transition. However, it has also made clear that a plan does not excuse failing to meet current obligations. The takeaway for the gambling sector is simple: the March reforms are not a policy footnote. They are a compliance rebuild, and regulators are already setting expectations for what “ready” looks like. Source : AUSTRAC Join us onfor early access to the latest igaming videos! Get notified about our video interviews, slot reviews and other exciting video content. All our videos are published on YouTube first. Subscribe Connect with us onand get the latest igaming news first! Stay up to date with the latest news from the iGaming industry. Check out our interviews, reviews, news and videos. Be the first to know when a story breaks. Follow

Key Violations Cited:

  • Targeting Minors:​ Ads that use imagery or language appealing to underage audiences.
  • False Inducements:​ Promotions that falsely advertise gambling as “free” or at heavily discounted rates without clear terms.
  • Missing Warnings:​ Failure to include the required statement warning against the dangers of addictive and compulsive gambling.

Public Call to Action:

The NGB has launched a public reporting campaign, urging citizens to submit screenshots of suspicious ads via email or WhatsApp. The timing coincides with the National Treasury’s controversial proposal for a 20% national online gambling tax, which the Free Market Foundation argues could inadvertently fuel this unregulated market further.

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