iGamingisle of man

Isle of Man Adopts New Laws Ahead of Vital AML Review

Following final approval from the nation’s parliament, the Isle of Man’s new gambling laws are set to come into effect. The new legislation comes at a delicate time for the island, as it looks to rebound from a series of crime-linked scandals and make a good account of itself to incoming Moneyval inspectors.

The Gambling Legislation (Amendment) Bill passed through the final stage of the Isle of Man’s parliament this week, and now only needs a form of rubberstamping known as Royal Assent before it passes into law.

The government says the new act will modernise the island’s gambling regulation and improve its international reputation.

It also gives much greater enforcement leverage to the Gambling Supervision Commission (GSC), allowing it to enter premises without a warrant and seize evidence when there is suspicion of non-compliance.

To bolster these powers, the act will bring in new offences for anyone who obstructs or fails to cooperate with a GSC investigation.

“The gambling sector has seen a global shift in the threat landscape, and the GSC is committed to being agile and responsive in its approach,” a spokesperson told Isle of Man Today.

The stakes, officials say, are high.

GSC chief executive Mark Rutherford told a committee examining the bill last year that the island’s gambling industry was currently “under attack” by organised crime and claimed that the new legislation would enable it to “take the fight back to the enemy”.

The Isle of Man’s police force, in partnership with the gambling regulator, has conducted a number of raids and arrests over the two years, in particular targeting companies with alleged links to Asian markets where offshore gambling is illegal.

In November, police cooperated with the United States’ Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to seize assets believed to belong to Cambodian organised crime outfit, the Prince Group.

In advance of the new law coming into effect, the GSC is consulting on what its new penalty regime should look like. Questions include what the maximum civil penalty that may be imposed on an operator or individual should be.

And in a further effort to avoid organised crime establishing a foothold in the island’s gambling market, the GSC is also asking for input on its new “fitness and propriety” guidance. The new rules will allow the regulator to assess whether individuals and entities meet required integrity standards.

Inspection pending

Passage of the law is also taking place mere months before a formal inspection of the Isle of Man’s anti-money laundering capabilities by international watchdog Moneyval.

A formal inspection, known as a “mutual evaluation”, began in January of this year and will continue throughout 2026.

Enshrining the island’s new Gambling Act will come just months before a key milestone, in October 2026, when investigators arrive for a two-week onsite inspection.

Assessors will judge whether the Isle of Man’s policies and practices are good enough to reliably counter money laundering and prevent the financing of terrorism.

In the wake of its recent brushes with gambling-linked crime, officials need to show that efforts like the new gambling bill have done enough to bolster its defences.

The dire consequences of failing this review are well known, thanks to object lessons from fellow point-of-supply jurisdictions Malta and Gibraltar.

Following a negative assessment, Malta was added to the Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) in 2021 and spent a year dealing with the consequences. Gibraltar suffered the same fate in June 2022, not emerging from the list until February 2024.

Greylisted jurisdictions face difficulties with finance and investor confidence. During Malta’s 12 months on the list, companies on the island repeatedly reported problems accessing banking and other financial services.

A spot on the greylist also does serious damage to the reputation of a region’s regulatory framework. 

This sees international regulators placing additional scrutiny on companies and leaves key suppliers like payments companies thinking twice before doing business with businesses in greylisted jurisdictions.

New era

The reworking of the Isle of Man’s gambling laws also comes at a time when the role of offshore hubs is in flux.

Nations globally are increasingly establishing their own licensing regimes and removing grey markets in the process.

The introduction in 2025 of a licensing regime in Brazil, for example, was a major blow to companies that prefer to operate offshore. Operators were told they need to either leave the market or comply with local regulations.

National regulations in several major nations are also taking a more critical look at the wider group activities of their licensees.

Authorities like the UK Gambling Commission are increasingly educated on the global activities of their licensees and regulators, both in Europe and worldwide are sharing more and more data when they discover operators populating the black market.

All of which raises the stakes for this new era of Isle of Man gambling regulation. 

There is an increasing need to sell the island as a solid, stable and secure hub for operators and suppliers who may need to manage local compliance requirements worldwide, but can rely on the island to provide a tax-friendly, low-drama hub on which to locate their headquarters.

Joe Ewens is an independent journalist with almost two decades of experience reporting on the global gambling industry.

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