PAGCOR has settled on a number it likes to repeat: 93.8 percent. That is the share of the 13,399 illegal gambling sites it has flagged to partner agencies that are now blocked — roughly 12,562 of them. Two months earlier, the figure was about 74 percent. The gap between those two numbers is the story, and so is the strategy the agency has built around it. PAGCOR is not claiming it has won. It is claiming something more modest and more honest: that blocking illegal sites over and over, even knowing they will return, is itself a deterrent worth the effort.
The AI behind the jump
A nineteen-point jump in the blocking rate in two months does not come from working harder at the same manual process. PAGCOR credits an AI-powered application it developed to check whether a website is a legitimate licensee or an illicit gambling platform. The tool's value is speed and scale: illegal operators spin up domains far faster than human reviewers can catalogue them, and an automated scanner that can triage candidates and feed confirmed targets to the agencies that actually pull the plug closes the gap between a site appearing and a site being flagged.
The blocking itself is a coordinated effort. PAGCOR identifies and refers; partner bodies including the National Telecommunications Commission and the Cybercrime Investigation and Coordination Center carry out the takedowns. That division of labor matters, because it is also where the limits live. PAGCOR can detect a thousand sites in a week, but the throughput of the system depends on how fast its partners act on the referrals.
Why blocking is whack-a-mole by design
It is important to be clear-eyed about what site-blocking can and cannot do. A blocked gambling site is not a destroyed one. The operator behind it can register a new domain, stand up a mirror, and be back online within hours, often pointing the same players to the new address through the same chat groups and ads. Site-blocking is therefore structurally a game of whack-a-mole, and no regulator anywhere has cleared the field permanently. A 93.8 percent blocking rate is a snapshot of a moving target, not a finish line.
PAGCOR appears to understand this, which is why its framing is about deterrence rather than elimination. The agency is, in its own words, banking on the repeated blocking of illegal sites as a deterrent — the theory being that gambling enthusiasts who keep hitting dead links, who have to keep hunting for the next working mirror, and who can never be sure the new one will not simply pocket their deposit, will eventually find it easier and safer to bet with a licensed operator. The deterrent is not the takedown of any single site. It is the cumulative friction of an illegal market that is never quite reachable and never quite trustworthy.
The goal was never to delete the illegal market in a single sweep. It was to make the illegal market annoying and unreliable enough that the licensed one looks like the easier choice.
The logic of deterrence-by-friction in PAGCOR's blocking strategyThe World Cup raises the stakes
The timing of the push is not accidental. Big sporting events are when betting-related searches surge, and a person typing "where to bet on the World Cup" into a search bar is precisely the user an illegal operator wants to catch. Illicit sites buy ads and optimize for exactly those queries around major tournaments, knowing the traffic is motivated and often inexperienced. A higher blocking rate going into the 2026 World Cup tilts the odds that a casual searcher's first few results are dead ends rather than convincing traps — which is the whole point.
This connects the enforcement story to the consumer-protection one. The same displaced infrastructure and skills that feed the post-POGO scam economy also feed illegal gambling sites, and the players who lose money to an unlicensed operator have no recourse: PAGCOR voids winnings placed with unauthorized operators — it has voided PHP 129 million in such winnings — and an offshore site that refuses to pay is beyond the reach of any Philippine remedy. A blocked site the player never reaches is a player who never deposits.
What this means for players
For an individual bettor, the practical takeaway is simple. The blocking effort reduces exposure but cannot guarantee that the site in front of you is safe, so the verification burden still sits with the player. A legitimately licensed operator can be checked against PAGCOR's published list of authorized licensees rather than the site's own marketing claims. The red flags are consistent and worth memorizing: promotions that are too generous to be real, pressure to deposit fast, payment routed only through personal e-wallet accounts, no verifiable license details, and the telltale moment when winnings suddenly become impossible to withdraw.
And the harder truth, beyond fraud: even a payout from an illegal site can be legally worthless, because PAGCOR can void it. Combined with the absence of any responsible-gaming safeguards — no deposit limits, no self-exclusion, no helpline tie-in — the case for staying inside the licensed perimeter is not just about avoiding scams. It is about being inside a system that has rules at all.
The bottom line
PAGCOR's 93.8 percent blocking rate is a real improvement, driven by AI detection and tighter coordination with the agencies that execute takedowns, and the timing ahead of the World Cup is deliberate. But the number should be read for what it is: a high-water mark in a permanent contest, not a victory. The agency's own framing — deterrence by friction rather than elimination — is the honest one. The illegal market will not be blocked out of existence. The bet is that it can be made enough of a hassle, and enough of a risk, that the licensed market wins by comparison. For players, the blocking is a tailwind; the verification is still their job.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources
- Philippine Daily Inquirer, "Pagcor: Repeated blocking of illicit gambling sites a useful deterrent"
- Philippine Daily Inquirer, "Pagcor voids P129M winnings by unauthorized online bettors"
- World Casino Directory, "PAGCOR blocks nearly 75% of detected illegal online gambling sites"
- PAGCOR press releases on illegal-site enforcement and KYC policy
- PH Gaming Intel, "How to Spot an Illegal Betting Site Before the World Cup"