Indonesia: Zero‑Tolerance Laws, Maximum Enforcement
Indonesia is one of the strictest anti‑gambling jurisdictions in Asia, with all forms of commercial gambling prohibited under the Criminal Code and reinforced by religious and social norms. For iGaming and payments teams, Indonesia is less a market to enter and more a high‑risk, high‑enforcement territory to ring‑fence in any regional strategy.
Legal Reality: Gambling as a Crime
The crime of gambling is defined in Articles 303 and 303 bis of the Criminal Code, backed by Law No. 1/2023, with penalties that can reach up to 10 years’ imprisonment and fines in the tens of millions of rupiah for organisers and participants. The law treats gambling broadly, covering games of chance or skill where money or value is staked, regardless of whether they happen in person or online.
There are narrow exceptions for state‑run activities such as certain lotteries or specific forms of betting, but these are tightly controlled and do not open a path for commercial casino or iGaming operators. Unlike transitional discussions in Thailand or pilot‑driven reforms in Vietnam, there is no active roadmap toward legal casinos or regulated online betting in Indonesia.
Online Gambling: Content, URLs, and Platforms Blocked
Indonesia’s Ministry of Communication and Informatics (Kominfo, now Komdigi) operates a standing task force dedicated to finding and blocking online gambling content. Since 2022, authorities have reported blocking hundreds of thousands of URLs and pieces of content, with totals passing 800,000 by early 2024 and more than 2.1 million gambling‑related items removed between October 2024 and late 2025.
In just the first week of 2025, Komdigi blocked over 43,000 gambling‑related digital items, including websites, social accounts, and files across major platforms. Officials have also warned infrastructure providers such as Cloudflare, noting that the majority of blocked gambling sites sampled in 2025 used its services, signalling that technical intermediaries are now firmly in the enforcement spotlight. This approach is stricter than many neighbours, including the Philippines and Cambodia, even as those markets also escalate domain blocking.
Payments, Bank Accounts, and Social Protection
Indonesia pairs content blocking with aggressive financial disruption. Bank Indonesia, the Financial Services Authority (OJK), and the Financial Intelligence Unit have coordinated to freeze thousands of bank accounts and restrict payments linked to online gambling, with recent campaigns reporting nearly 24,000 gambling‑related accounts blocked.
Authorities have also targeted e‑wallet flows: deposits through e‑wallets linked to gambling reached an estimated IDR 1.6 trillion in early 2025 before stricter controls reportedly cut that activity by around 80 percent for some providers. In some cases, the government has gone as far as cutting social‑welfare payments to families found gambling online, framing enforcement as both economic and social protection. This moves Indonesia closer to prohibition‑plus‑financial‑sanctions models also emerging in Malaysia and tightening Vietnam.
Indonesia’s Position in the Asian iGaming Map
In the regional picture, Indonesia is a large, mobile‑first population where gambling demand exists but is channelled almost entirely into illegal and offshore activity, not regulated domestic markets. That contrasts sharply with regulated hubs like the Philippines and tightly controlled Singapore, and even with hybrid environments in Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Bangladesh that are at least debating or piloting new models.
For serious operators and suppliers, Indonesia belongs firmly in the “do not target” column: geoblocking, traffic filtering, and explicit exclusion in product, marketing, and payment design are baseline requirements, not optional safeguards. Any regional blueprint covering Asia must treat Indonesia as an enforcement‑heavy jurisdiction to avoid, while focusing active roadmaps on more permissive or evolving markets such as the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Bangladesh.
This Indonesia market content is written for Asian iGaming by iGaming SEO content writer Jevvy Kim.