The Dutch gambling regulator KSA has ordered Polymarket’s operator to stop offering its crypto-based prediction markets to people in the Netherlands, backed by weekly penalty payments that can reach €840,000. The case matters far beyond the Dutch market: it’s a template for EU regulators to treat “event contracts” as illegal remote gambling unless licensed locally—regardless of whether the product is framed as “trading.”
The KSA’s message is blunt: if Dutch users can access the platform and stake money-like value on uncertain events, it is remote gambling—licence required. The regulator’s decision frames Polymarket as providing “opportunity to participate” in a game of chance without authorisation under Dutch law, and it backs the stop order with meaningful weekly penalties.
This is also not just about consumer protection boilerplate. Dutch public debate has focused on politically sensitive markets (elections, coalition formation) and the risk that such markets can incentivize manipulation, insider behaviour, or public distrust—especially where crypto rails and pseudonymity complicate supervision.
Most prediction markets list “Yes/No” contracts on an event (e.g., “Candidate X wins”). A contract price (say, 0.63) is marketed as an implied probability (63%). Users can buy/sell positions before settlement; at resolution, a winning share pays out and a losing share goes to zero (or close), with settlement often relying on an oracle or defined data source.
From a compliance lens, the functional test is simple: stake → chance/uncertainty → payout. Whether the UI says “trade” or “bet,” and whether pricing is formed by an order book or an AMM, regulators frequently classify the product as gambling (EU/UK) or as a derivative (US)—either way, it triggers licensing/authorisation. The KSA decision explicitly records Polymarket’s argument that outcomes are not “pure chance” because informed traders can act; it still treats the offering as a prohibited, unlicensed game of chance under Dutch law.
The published Dutch decision matters because it reads like an enforcement checklist for any cross-border prediction market:
In other words: this is not a nuanced “MiCA vs MiFID” debate. The KSA is treating the product as gambling first, crypto second.
The EU has no single “prediction market” passport. Gambling is largely regulated at member-state level, and the KSA action signals where enforcement is heading: availability + participation = local licensing exposure.
Practical consequences for prediction markets operating (or marketed) into the EU:
If you operate (or invest in) a prediction market touching the EU: treat the KSA decision as a regulatory routing signal. Your core risk is not “token compliance”—it’s unlicensed gambling distribution, with enforcement triggered by mere accessibility. The minimum viable compliance posture now looks like: hard geo-blocking, EU-market abstention by default, and a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction licensing strategy (or a pivot into fully regulated betting exchange frameworks).
Have you used Polymarket (or similar prediction markets) from within the EU—especially the Netherlands—or seen payment facilitators, wallet rails, “localisation” tactics, or influencer campaigns aimed at EU users? Send evidence (screenshots, transaction trails, affiliate links, domain clones, onboarding flows) via Whistle42.com. Insiders at operators, PSPs, or marketing affiliates: we also want to hear how geo-blocking and market targeting decisions are made.


