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    Home » South Africa Targets 20% Tax on Online Gambling
    ECONOMY

    South Africa Targets 20% Tax on Online Gambling

    November 26, 2025
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    Edward Kieswetter - Sars commissioner (Photo by Deon Raath)
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    South Africa’s National Treasury has proposed a sweeping 20 per cent tax on the gross gambling revenue of online betting platforms, marking the most ambitious attempt yet to temper the explosive growth of digital wagering and mitigate its mounting social toll. Released on 25 November 2025, the discussion paper frames the levy primarily as a behavioural deterrent rather than a mere revenue tool, although it could still deliver an estimated R10 billion annually to state coffers. As reported by Business Day, the initiative reflects growing alarm over how easily accessible smartphone betting has deepened addiction in a nation already grappling with 32.1 per cent unemployment and widespread financial distress.

    The scale of the phenomenon is stark. Figures from the National Gambling Board reveal that total wagers across all gambling forms soared to R1.5 trillion in the 2024–25 financial year, a rise of almost one-third year-on-year. Participation has more than doubled since 2017, climbing from 30.6 per cent to 65.7 per cent of adults by late 2023, with the National Lottery and online sports betting dominating preferences. Young adults aged 25–34 form the largest cohort, while Gauteng, Western Cape, and Mpumalanga together generate over 80 per cent of turnover, highlighting urban concentration of both activity and harm.

    This surge coincides with broader African and global patterns where mobile-first gambling has outpaced regulatory frameworks. According to PwC’s Africa Gambling Outlook 2024–2028, the continent’s online gambling market is forecast to expand from USD 2.1 billion in 2024 to USD 3.9 billion by 2028, driven overwhelmingly by South Africa and Nigeria. Within South Africa itself, gross gambling revenue from licensed operators leapt 27 per cent to R59 billion in 2024–25, yet the Treasury notes that current provincial taxes—typically 6 to 9 per cent on land-based activities—have failed to capture the full digital shift or address its externalities effectively.

    Internationally, the proposed 20 per cent rate aligns closely with measures in mature markets. The United Kingdom already imposes a 21 per cent remote gaming duty on gross profits, while New Zealand introduced a 12 per cent offshore operator tax in 2024. Kenya levies 15 per cent on online betting revenue and Ghana 20 per cent on gross gaming revenue, illustrating a regional trend toward higher duties to fund problem-gambling programmes and public health initiatives. South Africa’s Treasury explicitly cites these precedents, arguing that a uniform national tax would not only discourage pathological gambling but also simplify compliance by requiring operators to mirror provincial reporting directly to the South African Revenue Service.

    Beyond the headline levy, the paper floats additional safeguards, including mandatory registration of all interactive platforms and real-time data-sharing protocols with tax authorities. These steps aim to close loopholes exploited by unlicensed offshore sites that currently siphon an estimated R20–30 billion annually from the local economy while evading responsibility for player protection. The National Responsible Gambling Programme reports that calls to its helpline rose 42 per cent in 2024, with online sports betting now the primary trigger for treatment referrals—a reversal from a decade ago when casino play dominated.

    Critics within the industry warn that a 20 per cent bite could drive players back to unregulated black-market operators, yet Treasury officials counter that paired enforcement and awareness campaigns will mitigate migration. The revenue windfall, if realised, would dwarf the R2.9 billion collected from all gambling taxes in 2023–24 and could fund expanded mental health services, debt counselling, and youth prevention programmes at a time when household debt stands at 73 per cent of disposable income.

    With public submissions open until February 2026, the proposal places South Africa at a crossroads: embrace a bolder fiscal and social intervention that mirrors global best practice, or risk allowing one of the world’s fastest-growing online gambling markets to spiral further into addiction and financial ruin for its most vulnerable citizens. As smartphones place a casino in every pocket, the Treasury’s gamble is that a steep new tax will prove the most effective bet yet on responsible growth.

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