Gambling in Australia — Statistics & Facts 2026 | BusinessTats
Industry Report Gambling Australia 2025 – 2026

Gambling in Australia — Statistics & Facts

Australia holds the world record for per capita gambling losses — with AU$1,272 lost per adult per year — and operates one of the most structurally entrenched gambling economies on earth. Australian adults lose more money per head on gambling than any other nation, fuelled by the world's densest concentration of electronic gaming machines outside casinos, a booming online sports betting industry, and six major casino resorts. This report covers total market size, pokie machine data, sports betting explosive growth, state-by-state breakdowns, problem gambling statistics, regulatory developments, and the full market outlook to 2030.

20 min read Updated 2026 Industry Report
AU$25.5BTotal Gambling Losses 2025
AU$1,272Per Capita Loss (World #1)
~196KPokie Machines Nationwide
70%Adult Participation Rate
AU$6.2BOnline Gambling Market 2025
~5.3%CAGR to 2030
Sources: QGSO ABS AGSA H2 Gambling Capital Australian Institute of Health & Welfare Statista ACIL Allen Consulting

Australia's Gambling Economy — AU$25.5 Billion in Annual Losses and the World's Highest Per Capita Gambling Rate

Australia's gambling market is one of the most structurally entrenched in the world. Despite accounting for less than 0.4% of global population, Australia generates approximately 3–4% of world gambling revenue — a staggering overrepresentation explained by the uniquely permissive regulatory environment for electronic gaming machines (pokies), the country's historically deep gambling culture, and the explosive growth of digital sports wagering. In 2025, total gambling losses across all legal forms reached an estimated AU$25.5 billion, a 4.2% increase on 2024 and representing a new nominal record for the sector.

The defining statistic of Australia's gambling economy is its per capita loss figure: Australian adults lose approximately AU$1,272 per person per year — the highest rate in the world, ahead of Singapore (AU$1,174), Ireland (AU$588), Finland (AU$533), and Canada (AU$493). This figure has remained the world's highest for over two decades, embedded in the structural framework of a gambling infrastructure that includes approximately 196,000 poker machines operating across 6,600+ venues nationwide — providing one of the world's most accessible gambling environments for the 26 million Australian population. Electronic gaming machines (pokies) remain the single largest contributor to gambling losses, accounting for approximately 52–55% of total industry revenue, followed by online wagering at 24% and casino table games at 12%.

The structural dynamics of Australia's gambling market are shifting rapidly. The online sports betting sector — anchored by operators like Sportsbet, Tab, Ladbrokes, and Pointsbet — has been the fastest-growing segment for the past eight consecutive years, growing from approximately AU$1.1 billion in losses in 2017 to an estimated AU$6.2 billion in 2025. This growth trajectory mirrors the revenue diversification seen in other major consumer-facing industries — just as the long-term revenue compounding seen in dominant consumer brands like Nike reflects the power of structural brand engagement, Australia's gambling operators have successfully converted casual participants into regular digital bettors through mobile app ecosystems, in-play betting, same-game multis, and algorithmically personalised promotional offers. According to the World Health Organization's overview of gambling and health, problem gambling is recognised as a significant public health concern in high-income countries — a classification that squarely applies to Australia's market given its per capita loss figures and documented harm rates.

Key Statistics at a Glance — Gambling in Australia 2025 / 2026
MetricValue / Figure
Total Gambling Losses (2025 estimate)AU$25.5 Billion
Per Capita Adult Gambling LossesAU$1,272 (World's Highest)
YoY Growth in Total Gambling Losses (2024–2025)+4.2%
Electronic Gaming Machine (Pokie) Losses~AU$13.5 Billion (53% of total)
Number of Pokie Machines (Venues ex-casinos)~185,000 across 5,800+ venues
Total Pokie Machines (inc. casinos)~196,000 nationwide
Online / Digital Gambling Market Size (2025)AU$6.2 Billion
Online Wagering Growth (2017–2025)+464% over 8 years
Adult Participation Rate (any gambling)~70–73%
Adults with Moderate-to-High Problem Gambling Risk~400,000–500,000 (2–2.5%)
Problem Gamblers Affected (family members included)~5–10 people per problem gambler
Total Casino Resorts in Australia6 Major Casinos
Casino Revenue (2024–25 est.)AU$4.2–4.8 Billion
NSW Gambling Losses (largest state)~AU$8.8–9.1 Billion (35% of national)
Sports Betting Market Size (2025)AU$5.5–6.0 Billion in turnover losses
Mobile Betting Share of Online Wagers>75%
Lotteries & Scratch Cards RevenueAU$3.2 Billion
Racing (TAB) Industry LossesAU$2.4 Billion
Gambling Taxes Collected by States/TerritoriesAU$6.4–6.9 Billion annually
Projected Total Gambling Market (2030)AU$31–33 Billion
Online Gambling Projected Market Share (2030)30%+ of total revenue
2025
AU$25.5B
Market Forecast
Australia Total Gambling Losses
Total gambling losses in AU$ Billion  ·  2019 – 2034
25.5B
AU$ · 2025
Sources: H2 Gambling Capital, AGSA, QGSO, Statista, ACIL Allen Consulting  ·  *2026 onwards projected

196,000 Pokies, AU$13.5 Billion in Losses — Australia's Electronic Gaming Machine Dominance

Electronic gaming machines — universally known in Australia as "pokies" — are the defining structural feature of Australian gambling and the primary driver of gambling-related harm. Australia operates approximately 196,000 pokie machines nationwide, of which roughly 185,000 are located in clubs, pubs, and hotels outside of casinos — giving Australia the highest concentration of non-casino gaming machines per capita of any country in the world. Expressed differently: there is approximately one pokie for every 136 Australian adults. In the state of New South Wales alone, over 85,000 poker machines operate across some 2,800+ licensed venues — a density that no other comparable jurisdiction globally approaches.

Pokie machines generated an estimated AU$13.5 billion in losses in 2025 — approximately 53% of total national gambling losses — despite representing a slowly declining share of the overall gambling economy as digital sports wagering grows. The average NSW pokie machine generates approximately AU$80,000–AU$100,000 in revenue per year, with premium machines in high-traffic metropolitan venues generating substantially more. Maximum bet limits — AU$10 per spin in most states — have been a persistent flashpoint of regulatory debate, with harm minimisation advocates arguing that mandatory AU$1 bet limits (as trialled in some jurisdictions) materially reduce both per-session losses and problem gambling rates. Victoria and Queensland have introduced progressive reforms around pre-commitment technology and cash input limits, though comprehensive national regulatory harmonisation remains elusive.

~196KTotal Pokie Machines
AU$13.5BPokie Losses 2025
85K+NSW Machines Alone
1:136Machine-to-Adult Ratio
53%Share of Total Losses
6,600+Licensed Venues
Casino gaming floor with electronic gaming machines and slot machines representing Australia's gambling industry
Australia's electronic gaming machine (pokie) sector is the single largest contributor to gambling losses in the country — generating an estimated AU$13.5 billion per year across 196,000 machines. New South Wales alone hosts more than 85,000 pokies in pubs, clubs, and hotels — the highest density outside of casinos of any jurisdiction globally.
Global Context
Australia vs the World — AU$1,272 Per Capita Gambling Loss, Highest on Earth

Australia's per capita gambling loss of AU$1,272 per adult per year in 2025 is approximately 2.2x the rate of Ireland (AU$588), 2.6x Finland (AU$533), and more than double Canada (AU$493). The nearest competitor is Singapore (AU$1,174), where gambling access is concentrated in two integrated casino resorts. Australia's figure encompasses all legal forms, with pokies alone accounting for approximately AU$680 per adult. The combination of uniquely accessible non-casino machine gambling, a strong sports wagering culture, and six major casino complexes creates the structural conditions for Australia's unmatched global per capita position.


AU$6.2 Billion and Accelerating — Australia's Online Wagering Revolution

Australia's online sports betting market has been the gambling sector's most explosive growth segment for nearly a decade. Total online wagering losses grew from approximately AU$1.1 billion in 2017 to an estimated AU$6.2 billion in 2025 — a 464% increase across eight years that reflects the structural power of mobile-first betting ecosystems, the legalisation and normalisation of in-play betting on Australian rules football, rugby league, cricket, and international sports, and the increasing sophistication of same-game multi (SGM) wagering products that dramatically increase per-event betting engagement. The sector is dominated by four major operators — Sportsbet (Flutter Entertainment), TAB (Entain), Ladbrokes/Neds, and PointsBet — which collectively hold an estimated 80–85% of online wagering market share.

Mobile betting now accounts for over 75% of all online wager volume, driven by iOS and Android apps that integrate push notification promotions, live score tracking, cashout functionality, and personalised odds boosts. The AFL and NRL seasons drive the largest betting volumes, with individual AFL grand finals generating estimated wagering of AU$150–200 million in a single day across all platforms. The 2025 Cricket World Cup and Rugby World Cup tournaments also generated record-level Australian online wagering volumes. The Interactive Gambling Act 2001, which prohibited most forms of online casino gaming and in-play betting via internet, has remained in place — though grey market offshore casino access by Australian players continues to generate significant cross-border regulatory complexity. Just as the global expansion of dominant platforms has created winner-take-most market dynamics across consumer industries — a dynamic visible in the concentration of smartphone market share among a small number of dominant vendors — Australia's online wagering sector is consolidating rapidly around a handful of scaled operators with the capital to sustain customer acquisition costs and marketing investment.

AU$6.2BOnline Gambling 2025
+464%Growth Since 2017
75%+Mobile Bet Share
80–85%Top-4 Operator Share
24%Share of Total Losses
AU$200MAFL Grand Final Single Day

Sports Betting Product Innovation — Same-Game Multis, Cash-Out, and In-Play

The structural acceleration of online wagering in Australia is product-driven, not merely volume-driven. The same-game multi (SGM) — a wager combining multiple outcomes within a single sporting event at combined multiplied odds — has become Australia's single most popular sports betting product format since its widespread rollout in 2019–2020. SGMs offer operators significantly higher margins (estimated 12–18% hold rate versus 5–6% on single-event bets) while generating higher engagement and session duration. Cashout functionality — allowing bettors to settle bets for a guaranteed return before event completion — has driven average session lengths up by approximately 35–40% according to operator data. The result is a product ecosystem specifically engineered to maximise customer lifetime value through engagement intensity rather than bet volume alone.


NSW, Victoria, Queensland — The State-by-State Anatomy of Australian Gambling Losses

Australia's gambling market is administered primarily at the state and territory level, creating a fragmented regulatory environment with significant variation in machine density, tax rates, harm minimisation requirements, and casino licensing. New South Wales is by far the largest gambling state, accounting for an estimated 35–38% of total national gambling losses — a figure driven primarily by the extraordinary density of non-casino pokies in NSW clubs and pubs under the state's unique club industry structure. Victoria's market is shaped by the Crown Melbourne casino's dominant role and a more centralised gaming machine regulatory framework.

New South Wales
~AU$8.9B losses — 35% of national total
Highest pokies density in the world outside casinos: 85,000+ machines in 2,800+ clubs and pubs. Home to Star Entertainment's The Star Sydney casino. NSW clubs are structurally dependent on pokie revenue for subsidised dining, sports facilities, and community programs — creating entrenched political resistance to machine reduction. NSW online wagering losses also highest nationally, driven by population size and digital adoption.
Victoria
~AU$5.8B losses — 23% of national total
Crown Melbourne — Australia's largest casino complex with AU$2.3B+ annual revenue — anchors Victoria's gambling economy. The state's pokies are exclusively operated in hotels (pubs) rather than clubs, limiting machine concentration per venue. Victoria led the national adoption of mandatory pre-commitment technology (YourPlay system) on all EGMs. Ongoing Crown casino ownership restructure (Blackstone acquisition) reshaping premium gaming segment.
Queensland
~AU$4.2B losses — 16% of national total
The Star Gold Coast and Treasury Brisbane anchor casino revenue. Queensland's pokie market is significant but more regulated than NSW — pub and club machines capped at 45 per venue. Gold Coast tourism drives high casino visitation volumes from domestic and international visitors. Sports betting is disproportionately strong among QLD residents due to NRL culture. Lottery revenue via Golden Casket historically significant.
Western Australia
AU$1.8B losses — unique pokies prohibition
WA is the only state/territory in Australia that prohibits electronic gaming machines outside of Crown Perth casino — making it a global outlier in pokies regulation. Crown Perth (being acquired by Burswood Ltd interests) is the sole legal EGM venue. Despite pokies prohibition, WA sports betting and lottery losses are comparable to national averages per capita. TABtouch dominates wagering. Remote community gambling harm is a significant policy focus.
South Australia
AU$1.5B losses — SkyCity Adelaide anchor
SkyCity Adelaide casino (NZX-listed operator) is SA's primary casino venue. SA has approximately 13,000 pokies in venues, with the state government having progressive harm minimisation legislation including mandatory pre-commitment from 2025. SA's gambling tax regime generates approximately AU$500M+ annually for state revenue. The Adelaide Cup and AFL Power/Crows seasons drive significant sports wagering seasonality.
ACT, NT & Tasmania
Combined AU$1.2B — small populations, elevated per capita rates
The ACT has moved to dramatically reduce pokies through a buyback scheme, targeting a reduction from 4,900 to 4,000 machines by 2030. The Northern Territory is home to the online gambling licence frameworks that allowed operators like Sportsbet and Betfair to establish Australian operations — the NT Racing Commission licences the majority of Australia's online wagering operators. Tasmania's Federal Group long held a monopoly on pokies and casinos, restructured in 2024.

Six Casino Resorts, AU$4.5 Billion Revenue — Crown, Star, and the Premium Gaming Segment

Australia operates six major casino resorts across its five largest states, each holding an exclusive or near-exclusive casino licence for its jurisdiction. These six properties — Crown Melbourne, Crown Perth, The Star Sydney, The Star Gold Coast, SkyCity Adelaide, and Treasury Brisbane — collectively generate an estimated AU$4.2–4.8 billion in annual gaming revenue, with non-gaming revenue (hotels, food & beverage, entertainment) adding approximately AU$1.5–2.0 billion to total complex revenues. Crown Melbourne alone — Australia's largest casino complex, hosting over 2,500 gaming machines and 500 table games across 510,000 square feet of gaming space — generated approximately AU$2.3 billion in gaming revenue in its most recent full financial year.

The casino sector in Australia has undergone its most significant regulatory disruption in decades across 2021–2025. Following scathing royal commissions in Victoria (Finkelstein), New South Wales (Bell), and Western Australia (Owen), all three Crown Resorts casinos were found temporarily or conditionally unsuitable to hold casino licences due to money laundering risks, junket operator relationships, and governance failures. Crown Resorts was subsequently acquired by Blackstone Real Estate for AU$8.9 billion in 2022 in one of Australia's largest private equity transactions — marking the privatisation of what had been Australia's dominant listed gaming company. Star Entertainment Group faced simultaneous suitability challenges in NSW and Queensland, entering administration in 2024 under the weight of AU$1.6 billion in remediation costs, compliance failures, and revenue losses from international VIP market exit.

Australian casino interior with gaming tables and bright lights representing the casino sector
Australia's six major casino resorts collectively generate approximately AU$4.5 billion in annual gaming revenue. Crown Melbourne — Australia's largest integrated resort casino — is the dominant single venue, followed by The Star Sydney and Crown Perth. The sector has undergone its most dramatic regulatory restructuring in three decades following royal commission findings across 2021–2024.

Australia's gambling industry is structurally embedded in community infrastructure, state government revenue, and the cultural fabric of pub and club life to a degree that has no close equivalent in any other comparable developed economy.

— ACIL Allen Consulting, Australian Gambling Industry Review, 2024

400,000–500,000 Problem Gamblers and AU$22B+ in Annual Social Costs

Australia's high gambling participation rates and per capita losses generate a commensurate burden of problem gambling and associated social harm. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) estimates that approximately 400,000–500,000 Australian adults (2–2.5% of the adult population) experience moderate-to-high levels of gambling-related harm — including financial crisis, relationship breakdown, employment loss, depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation — at any given point in time. When accounting for the documented ripple effect of problem gambling on family members, friends, and workplace colleagues — estimated at 5–10 people per problem gambler — the number of Australians meaningfully affected by problem gambling harm may exceed 2.5–4 million people.

The total social costs of problem gambling in Australia — encompassing financial losses beyond means, mental health treatment, family services, criminal justice costs, lost productivity, and homelessness — have been estimated at AU$22–24 billion annually by various econometric studies, including work by AGSA and state-commissioned impact assessments. This figure significantly exceeds the AU$6.4–6.9 billion in gambling taxes collected by state and territory governments each year, raising persistent policy questions about whether the fiscal benefits of gambling to government budgets are adequately matched by expenditure on harm prevention, treatment, and community support. The OECD's framework for measuring social costs of unhealthy behaviours provides a useful comparative methodology for contextualising the AU$22B+ burden alongside other regulated harm categories such as alcohol and tobacco.

500KProblem Gamblers Est.
2.5%Adult Population Affected
AU$22B+Annual Social Cost Est.
AU$6.7BGambling Taxes Collected
5–10xPeople Affected Per Gambler
80%Problem Gambling from Pokies

Six Forces Driving Australia's Gambling Economy

1
The Club Industry Structural Model — Pokies as Community Infrastructure Funding
Australia's registered club sector — RSL clubs, bowling clubs, football clubs, and community organisations — operates the vast majority of non-casino pokies under a uniquely Australian model where gambling revenue subsidises community services, sporting facilities, dining, and social programs. This structural arrangement creates a deeply embedded constituency for pokie preservation: millions of Australians benefit from subsidised club meals, free sports facilities, and community functions funded by pokie losses. In NSW alone, the registered clubs sector employs approximately 65,000 people and contributes an estimated AU$4+ billion to the state economy. This community embeddedness makes pokies uniquely resistant to the reformist policies that have reduced machine availability in peer countries like the UK.
2
Sports Culture and Wagering Integration — AFL, NRL, Cricket, and Horse Racing
Australia's gambling economy is structurally intertwined with its sports culture in a way that has no direct global equivalent. The AFL and NRL — Australia's two most watched sports leagues — broadcast live betting odds alongside scores, with wagering operators holding prominent naming and jersey sponsorships at club level. Horse racing generates approximately AU$2.4 billion in TAB and bookmaker losses annually, underpinned by iconic events including the Melbourne Cup (the world's largest annual prize pool race), the Cox Plate, and Sydney's spring carnival. The Melbourne Cup Day generates an estimated AU$300M+ in wagering — with approximately 80% of Australian adults placing at least one bet on the race each year, making it the single most widely participated gambling event globally by population share.
3
Lottery and Instant Scratch Tickets — AU$3.2 Billion in Low-Harm Mass Participation
Lotteries and instant scratch cards represent the most broadly participated and lowest-harm gambling format in Australia. The Lott (operated by Tabcorp) and Oz Lotto generate approximately AU$3.2 billion in losses annually across Saturday Lotto, Powerball, Set for Life, and the full suite of instant scratch products. Lottery participation is the most demographically even form of Australian gambling — with near-equal engagement across income, age, and geographic groups. Digital lottery ticket sales have grown significantly since 2020, with online purchase now accounting for approximately 45% of all lottery transactions. Lotteries also generate significant charity and sporting body funding through mandatory community benefit contributions attached to licences.
4
Gambling Advertising — AU$300M+ Spent and Normalising Wagering for Young Australians
Australia's sports betting operators collectively spend an estimated AU$300–350 million per year on advertising and marketing — one of the highest per-capita gambling advertising investments in the world. During AFL and NRL broadcasts, betting advertisements can appear more than 100 times over a 90-minute match window including pre-game, in-match, and post-match placements. Research by the Australian Gambling Research Centre (AGRC) found that children as young as 8 could name multiple gambling brands and associate them with sport viewing, raising concerns about normalisation of wagering behaviour among the next generation of adults. Following sustained regulatory pressure, the federal government announced a phased ban on gambling advertising during live sports broadcasts — to be implemented from 2026 — representing the most significant regulatory reform to the advertising landscape in decades.
5
Tourism and Destination Gambling — International Visitors to Australia's Casino Resorts
Prior to COVID-19, Australia's casino resorts — particularly Crown Melbourne and The Star Sydney — derived significant revenue from international VIP (junket) gamblers, primarily from mainland China, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia. At their peak in 2018–19, international VIP programs were generating approximately AU$1.5–2.0 billion in combined revenue for Crown and Star. The royal commissions of 2021–2023 effectively ended the structured VIP junket model in Australia following revelations of money laundering facilitation. International mass-market tourism-driven gaming is recovering gradually in 2024–2026 as inbound tourism to Australia recovers, but the structural high-roller revenue model that previously characterised Australia's premium casino segment is unlikely to return in its previous form under post-royal commission compliance frameworks.
6
Responsible Gambling Technology — Pre-Commitment, Self-Exclusion, and BetStop
Australia launched the national BetStop self-exclusion register in August 2023 — allowing problem gamblers to exclude themselves from all licensed online wagering operators with a single registration. By 2025, over 85,000 Australians had registered on BetStop — significantly exceeding government projections and confirming both the scale of problem gambling demand for support tools and the effectiveness of frictionless access to self-exclusion. Victoria's mandatory pre-commitment system (YourPlay) on electronic gaming machines — requiring players to set time and money limits before beginning play — has been cited as a model for national harmonisation. Western Australia's pokies-free model for non-casino venues remains the most radical harm reduction approach in the country and is used by reformers as evidence that pokies prohibition is economically compatible with robust state revenue performance through casino operations alone.

Seven Forces Reshaping Gambling in Australia Through 2030

The Mobile-First Wagering Revolution — 75%+ of Bets Now Placed via Smartphone

Australia's online wagering sector is now overwhelmingly mobile-first. Over 75% of all sports bets are placed via smartphone apps, with Sportsbet, Ladbrokes, and TAB apps consistently ranking among the most downloaded in Australia's App Store. Mobile betting has democratised in-play wagering, same-game multis, and micro-market betting (individual player performance markets) in ways that fundamentally increase engagement intensity per sporting event. The convergence of sporting content and betting apps in a single mobile experience is considered the single most significant structural driver of online wagering growth through 2030.

Live Sports Betting Advertising Ban — 2026 Federal Reform and Its Market Impact

The Australian federal government's announced ban on gambling advertising during live sports broadcasts — scheduled for phased implementation from mid-2026 — represents the biggest regulatory shift in the wagering sector since online betting was first legalised. The ban will prohibit wagering ads during live sport broadcasts between 6am and 10pm, with an immediate 8:30pm–5am ban applying from 2026. Industry analysts estimate this could reduce online wagering customer acquisition volumes by 15–25%, though operators with established customer databases are expected to adapt through digital direct channels, affiliate marketing, and app engagement.

Casino Sector Remediation — Crown, Star, and the Post-Royal Commission Rebuild

Australia's two major casino groups — Crown (now Blackstone-owned) and Star Entertainment — have collectively spent over AU$2.0 billion on compliance remediation, technology systems, responsible gambling infrastructure, and governance overhaul since 2021. Crown Melbourne regained its suitability in late 2023. Crown Perth received conditional approval in 2024. Star Entertainment entered administration in 2024 with AU$1.6B in liabilities, with a rescue consortium from private equity and real estate interests acquiring the business in 2025. The post-royal commission era is fundamentally reshaping the risk tolerance, operating model, and profitability expectations of Australian casino operations.

Pokies Reform Debate — Cashless Gaming Cards and Bet Limit Reductions

The push for cashless electronic gaming — requiring all pokie play via registered player card rather than anonymous cash — has gained significant legislative momentum since 2023, following the ACT's leading adoption and the federal government's commitment to explore national cashless gaming frameworks. Proponents argue that card-based play enables real-time spending tracking, self-exclusion enforcement, and consumer data for harm identification. NSW, with the largest pokie fleet nationally, is the pivotal jurisdiction. Industry groups estimate that a mandatory AU$1 max bet limit on pokies could reduce annual EGM revenue by 35–40% — making NSW club revenue viability the central battleground of Australia's most significant gambling policy debate.

Offshore Illegal Online Casinos — AU$3B+ in Grey Market Consumer Spend

Despite the Interactive Gambling Act 2001's prohibition on most forms of online casino gaming by Australian residents, an estimated AU$2.5–3.5 billion per year in Australian consumer spend flows to unlicensed offshore online casino operators. These operators — primarily licensed in Curaçao, Malta, and Isle of Man — offer Australian residents the roulette, blackjack, online slots, and live dealer games that domestic operators cannot legally provide. The ACMA operates a website blocking regime that has blocked over 900 illegal gambling sites since 2019, but sophisticated consumers readily circumvent this via VPN.

Esports and Gaming Betting — Emerging Category for 18–35 Male Demographic

Esports wagering — betting on professional video game competitions including CS:GO, League of Legends, Dota 2, and Valorant — has emerged as a structurally significant new wagering category in Australia since 2021. Estimated Australian esports betting turnover reached AU$180–250 million in 2025, with strong growth trajectory among 18–30-year-old male bettors. All major licensed operators now offer esports markets. Esports betting's appeal to digital-native younger demographics concerns harm prevention researchers given that pathway gambling — starting with low-stakes familiar activities and escalating — is a documented risk factor for developing problem gambling behaviours.

First Nations Gambling Harm — Remote Community Policy Priority

Gambling harm in First Nations communities — particularly in remote Northern Territory, Western Australia, Queensland, and South Australia communities — is disproportionately severe relative to income levels and access to support services. Research indicates problem gambling rates in some remote Indigenous communities may be 3–5x the national average, with limited access to counselling, financial hardship services, or culturally appropriate support. Community permit systems in the NT limiting gambling venue access to community members have shown measurable harm reduction outcomes. Federal government policy under the National Strategy for Gambling Reform (2022–2025) identifies First Nations gambling harm reduction as a priority area requiring dedicated funding and community-led solutions.


Regulatory Fragmentation, Social Harm, and the Advertising Normalisation Problem

1
State-by-State Regulatory Fragmentation — A Patchwork of 8 Different Regimes
Australia's gambling regulation is administered by state and territory governments, creating eight distinct legislative frameworks with varying machine density caps, tax rates, responsible gambling requirements, advertising rules, and harm minimisation obligations. This fragmentation creates regulatory arbitrage opportunities for operators — particularly online wagering businesses licenced in the Northern Territory that serve customers across all jurisdictions — and makes national policy coordination extraordinarily difficult. The federal government's ability to impose uniform standards is constitutionally constrained, requiring cooperative federalism mechanisms and negotiated intergovernmental frameworks that move slowly relative to the pace of product and technology innovation in the sector.
2
Gambling Revenue Dependence in State Government Budgets
Australian state and territory governments collected an estimated AU$6.4–6.9 billion in gambling taxes in 2024–25 — equivalent to approximately 5–7% of total state own-source revenue across the largest states. NSW gambling tax revenue exceeded AU$2.2 billion; Victoria AU$1.9 billion; Queensland AU$1.1 billion. This structural dependence on gambling taxation creates an inherent tension in regulatory reform — state governments simultaneously responsible for harm minimisation and financially reliant on continued high-volume gambling activity. It is a conflict of interest that critics argue has materially slowed pokies reform, advertising restriction, and harm reduction investment relative to the level of evidence supporting more aggressive intervention.
3
Youth Gambling Exposure — Advertising Normalisation Among Under-25s
The saturation of gambling advertising in Australian sports media has created measurable changes in gambling attitude and behaviour among young Australians. Research by the AGRC found that 78% of young Australians aged 12–17 had seen gambling advertising in the past week. By age 18, many young Australians have already developed defined brand preferences among wagering operators based on advertising exposure — before placing a single legal bet. The normalisation concern is compounded by the integration of "free play" gaming apps, loot boxes in video games, and social casino gaming platforms that simulate gambling mechanics without real money, potentially establishing reward-seeking patterns that transition to real-money wagering on reaching legal age.
4
Financial Hardship and Debt — The AU$22 Billion Social Cost Burden
The estimated AU$22–24 billion annual social cost of problem gambling in Australia — encompassing financial crisis, family breakdown, mental health, legal system, and productivity impacts — is poorly matched by government investment in harm prevention and treatment services. Total annual government spending on gambling harm treatment and prevention across all jurisdictions is estimated at approximately AU$150–200 million — less than 1% of the social cost burden and less than 2.5% of gambling tax revenue collected. Advocacy groups including the Alliance for Gambling Reform have consistently argued that the treatment-to-harm ratio in Australian gambling public policy is among the most imbalanced of any regulated harmful product sector globally.
5
Climate of Algorithmic Personalisation — Inducements, Bonuses, and Targeted Promotions
Australia's licensed online wagering operators deploy sophisticated customer data analytics platforms to deliver algorithmically personalised bonus offers, odds boosts, and re-engagement promotions to dormant or high-risk customers. Research indicates that targeted inducements — particularly "bonus bets" and "multi-boost" offers sent via push notification at high-risk times (late night, immediately after salary crediting) — are disproportionately directed at customers exhibiting early signs of problem gambling behaviour. The 2024 review of inducements by the federal government's National Consumer Protection Framework for online wagering resulted in voluntary code commitments from major operators, but critics argue enforceable statutory restrictions are required given the commercial incentives to continue targeted promotion of high-risk customers.

Australia Gambling Market Forecast — Path to AU$33 Billion by 2030

Australia's total gambling market is projected to grow from an estimated AU$25.5 billion in 2025 to approximately AU$31–33 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of approximately 4.5–5.5%. Online wagering will be the dominant growth engine — projected to grow from AU$6.2 billion to AU$10–12 billion by 2030 as mobile betting penetration deepens, product innovation (same-game multis, micro-markets, in-play on expanded sports) drives per-customer revenue, and the advertising ban reshapes marketing mix without materially reducing aggregate demand. Electronic gaming machines are forecast to grow more slowly — at 2–3% CAGR — as cashless gaming reforms, machine number caps, and demographic shifts (older pokie players replaced by digital-native younger cohorts less oriented to EGMs) moderate the sector's contribution. The parallel trajectory of large consumer industries demonstrates that revenue scale built over decades through consistent market penetration and product innovation creates durable market positions — a dynamic evident in the long-term revenue trajectories of global franchise businesses that have compounded revenue steadily over 20+ year periods, and Australia's gambling operators display similar structural revenue resilience.

Growth Projections
Australia Gambling Market — Path to 2030
AU$33BTotal Market 2030
~5.3%CAGR 2025–2030
AU$11B+Online Wagering 2030
30%+Online Share 2030
AU$7.5BGambling Tax 2030
77%Mobile Bet Share 2030

Key Growth Drivers Through 2030

Online Wagering Mobile App Deepening — Engagement Intensity Over Customer Acquisition
With sports betting customer acquisition costs at historical highs (estimated AU$300–500 per new registered customer for major operators), growth through 2030 will be driven primarily by increasing revenue per existing customer through product innovation, retention mechanics, and same-game multi adoption. Operators are investing heavily in AI-driven personalisation engines, streaming sports content integration, and social gambling features that increase session frequency without requiring new customer recruitment. These dynamics will sustain online wagering revenue growth even if the advertising ban reduces new customer acquisition by 15–20%.
Casino Resort Reinvestment — Crown Melbourne Expansion and Integrated Entertainment
Following Blackstone's acquisition, Crown Melbourne is undertaking a AU$1.8 billion reinvestment program focused on premium hotel expansion, food and beverage repositioning, entertainment venue upgrades, and a revised gaming floor layout to maximise domestic premium mass-market yield rather than international VIP volumes. This strategic reorientation — toward the domestic high-net-worth Australian gaming and hospitality market — is expected to generate sustainable revenue growth from a better-regulated, lower-risk base than the pre-royal commission international junket model.
Cashless Gaming Reform Implementation — Structural Change to EGM Sector Economics
The staged implementation of cashless electronic gaming card requirements — starting in the ACT and expected to roll out nationally through 2027–2030 — will structurally reshape the pokie sector's economics. While reformers hope for significant loss reduction per player from the pre-commitment and limit-setting features of registered cards, operators are adapting through gamification of loyalty programs, integrated rewards ecosystems, and frictionless digital top-up functionality that may partially offset harm reduction benefits through increased convenience and engagement.
Potential Online Casino Legalisation — AU$3B+ Regulatory Opportunity
The ongoing federal review of Australia's online gambling framework — specifically whether to legalise and regulate domestic online casino gaming currently prohibited under the Interactive Gambling Act — represents the single largest potential structural change to the Australian gambling market. If Australia follows New Zealand's model of regulated domestic online gambling, the estimated additional legal market size could be AU$2.5–4.0 billion, redirecting consumer spend from grey-market offshore sites to regulated domestic operators with mandatory responsible gambling controls, AML frameworks, and Australian tax obligations.
Womens Sport and Expanding Betting Markets — AFL Women's, W-League, and Netball
The rapid growth of professional women's sport in Australia — particularly AFLW (AFL Women's), the W-League (women's football), Super Netball, and women's cricket — is creating significant new betting market opportunities for licensed wagering operators. AFLW wagering volumes have grown approximately 45% year-on-year since the league's inception, with increasing media rights deals, expanded fixture calendars, and growing attendance driving liquidity. Women's sports wagering is projected to represent AU$400–600 million in annual operator revenue by 2028 as scheduling, broadcast coverage, and public profile continue to expand rapidly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Australians lose approximately AU$25.5 billion per year on gambling — equating to AU$1,272 per adult per year, the highest per capita gambling losses in the world. This figure covers all legal gambling forms including electronic gaming machines (pokies), sports betting, lotteries, and casinos.

Approximately 70–73% of Australian adults participate in some form of gambling each year. Lottery and scratch cards are the most popular form, followed by electronic gaming machines (pokies) and sports betting. Around 39% engage in non-lottery forms of gambling.

Australia has approximately 185,000–196,000 electronic gaming machines (pokies) operating across some 6,600+ venues. This represents roughly one pokie machine for every 136 adults. New South Wales has the largest concentration with over 85,000 machines — the highest density outside of casinos of any jurisdiction in the world.

Australia's online gambling market was valued at approximately AU$6.2 billion in 2025, driven primarily by sports betting and online wagering. The market has grown 464% since 2017. It is projected to grow to AU$10–12 billion by 2030, with mobile betting accounting for over 75% of all online wagers.

New South Wales records the highest total gambling losses in Australia, accounting for approximately 35–38% of all national gambling revenue (~AU$8.9 billion). NSW also has the highest concentration of pokies outside of casinos of any jurisdiction in the world. Victoria is the second-largest gambling state, anchored by Crown Melbourne.

Australia's total gambling market is projected to grow from AU$25.5 billion in 2025 to approximately AU$31–33 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of ~5.3%. Online wagering is forecast to reach AU$10–12 billion and capture 30%+ of total gambling revenue by 2030, driven by mobile app growth, product innovation, and potential domestic online casino regulation.

Data Sources & References

Primary: Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) — Gambling in Australia Reports 2023-2025

Primary: Queensland Government Statistician's Office (QGSO) — Australian Gambling Statistics 40th Edition

Primary: Australian Gambling Research Centre (AGRC) — National Survey of Gambling Participation

External: World Health Organization (WHO) — Gambling and Public Health Overview

External: OECD — Measuring the Social Costs of Unhealthy Behaviours (Comparative Framework)

External: Gambling Therapy (Gordon Moody) — International Problem Gambling Support & Research

Additional: H2 Gambling Capital — Australia Online Wagering Market Reports · ACIL Allen Consulting — Economic Impact of Gambling · Statista — Australian Gambling Market Size 2019-2030 · ACMA — Australian Interactive Gambling Division Annual Reports · ABS — Household Expenditure Survey · Crown Resorts/Blackstone Annual Reports · Star Entertainment Group ASX Filings · NT Racing Commission Licensed Operator Data

Gambling AustraliaPokies StatisticsSports BettingCasino RevenueProblem GamblingOnline WageringCrown MelbourneNSW Gambling2025–2026Industry Report

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