Crypto: Polymarket Hit By Fresh European Crackdowns As Hungary, Portugal...
The moves highlight growing uncertainty over whether crypto prediction markets are to be treated as finance or gambling.
Update Jan. 20, 12:29 p.m. UTC: This article has been updated to include a paragraph on the details surrounding Portugal’s ban on Polymarket.
Hungary and Portugal have taken steps to restrict access to the crypto-based prediction market Polymarket, adding to mounting regulatory pressure on the platform across Europe.
Hungary’s regulatory authority, Szabályozott Tevékenységek Felügyeleti Hatósága, has temporarily blocked access to Polymarket’s domain and subdomains, citing the “forbidden organization of gambling activities.” According to an official notice released Friday, the restriction will remain in place until the authority completes its review.
Users reported being unable to access the platform using their Hungarian IP addresses, which now display a warning message from the country’s regulator.
In Portugal, the Gaming Regulation and Inspection Service (SRIJ) also ordered Polymarket to wind down activity in the country, but the platform was still available for users on Monday, according to local news outlet Rádio Renascença, suggesting enforcement was still in progress.
The regulator reportedly said Polymarket’s activity was illegal because the platform lacked the required license and operates in a country where political betting is banned nationwide. The report also identified about 4 million euros ($4.6 million) in wagers placed on Portuguese presidential races in the hours before the election results were announced, raising concerns about potential insider trading.
The latest crackdowns came a week after Ukraine blocked Polymarket, classifying its activities as unlicensed gambling under national law, Cointelegraph reported on Jan. 13.
Polymarket has also been restricted or blocked in several other countries over gambling concerns, including France, Belgium, Poland, Singapore and Switzerland.
France’s National Gaming Authority said in November 2024 that it planned to block the platform for failing to comply with national gambling laws. Switzerland followed later that month, when the Swiss Gambling Supervisory Authority classified Polymarket as unlicensed gambling and ordered access restrictions.
Source: CoinTelegraph