18+ only. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, contact PAGCOR's responsible gaming hotline.
Illustration of the Philippines drafting a comprehensive iGaming legislative framework in 2026
Analysis

The Bill That Could Replace the Patchwork: Inside the Philippines' New Comprehensive iGaming Framework

The Senate and PAGCOR are jointly drafting a single comprehensive law to govern the Philippine online gaming sector — replacing the current memorandum-by-memorandum patchwork with a unified framework covering payment-channel controls, marketing restrictions, and consumer protection. DigiPlus sits on the technical working group. This analysis maps what a comprehensive iGaming law would change, why the licensed industry wants the certainty it offers, and why it is being drafted in direct tension with the Senate camp that would rather ban online gambling outright — all as World Cup betting peaks.

Vivian Yu, Editor-in-Chief
| | 11 min read

For all the regulatory motion in the Philippine online gaming sector over the past year — the e-wallet delinking, the GGR share-rate cut, the minimum guaranteed fee, the rebate and cashback cap, the helpline, the responsible-gaming alliance — one structural fact has remained constant: none of it rests on a comprehensive statute. The sector is governed by a stream of PAGCOR memoranda and circulars, each addressing a piece of the picture, none of them anchored in a single primary law written for online gambling as it actually exists today. That is now changing. The Senate and PAGCOR are jointly drafting a comprehensive iGaming framework intended to replace the patchwork with one unified law — and DigiPlus, the operator that controls roughly half the market, sits on the technical working group writing it.

This analysis maps what a comprehensive framework would change, why the licensed industry is actively helping to build the cage it will live in, and why the drafting is happening in direct tension with the Senate camp that would prefer to ban online gambling altogether — all of it unfolding in the very weeks that the FIFA World Cup is driving Philippine betting volume to its annual peak.

1 law
Comprehensive framework to replace the memo patchwork
3 pillars
Reported focus: payments, marketing, consumer protection
7 bills
Under the rival Anti-Online Gambling Act umbrella
June 11
World Cup kickoff, peak betting volume, 2026

The problem the framework is meant to solve

The Philippine online gaming sector is regulated, today, by accretion. PAGCOR issues a memorandum capping rebates; another setting the minimum guaranteed fee; another adjusting the GGR share rate; another tightening KYC; another on advertising. Each is valid, each is enforceable, and together they constitute a functioning regulatory regime — but a brittle one. Memoranda can be issued, deferred, amended, or withdrawn on short notice, as the two-month deferral of the minimum guaranteed fee illustrated. They are administrative instruments, not statute, and they do not provide the kind of stable, predictable foundation that long-term capital investment prefers.

For a sector that PAGCOR is simultaneously trying to formalize and consolidate, that brittleness is a problem. Operators being asked to invest in compliance infrastructure, in responsible-gaming systems, and in the scale needed to clear the new fee floor want to know the rules will not be rewritten by the next memorandum. A comprehensive law answers that want. It would gather the scattered requirements into one statutory framework, give them the durability of legislation, and provide the sector a settled basis on which to plan. The reported focus areas — payment-channel controls, marketing and advertising restrictions, and consumer protection — are exactly the domains currently governed by separate memoranda, now proposed to be unified.

The three pillars, read against what already exists

Each reported pillar of the framework is best understood as the codification and extension of a measure already in force.

Payment-channel controls. The 2025 BSP order that delinked e-wallets from gaming accounts was the single most consequential intervention in the sector's recent history, and it was accomplished through banking regulation rather than gaming law. Codifying payment-channel controls in a comprehensive iGaming statute would put the funding-side rules on a firmer footing and integrate them with the gaming framework rather than leaving them to the central bank. For players, this is the part of the framework that most directly governs how money moves into and out of a gaming account.

Marketing and advertising restrictions. The rebate and cashback cap that took effect June 1 already constrains one form of promotion. A comprehensive law would likely generalize that logic into broader advertising rules — where, how, and to whom licensed operators can market. This is also the pillar with the most obvious consumer-protection valence, given the volume of gambling advertising that the World Cup is currently pushing across Philippine feeds, and it extends the same competition dynamics analyzed in the cashback cap: rules that raise the compliance baseline tend to favor operators with the infrastructure to meet them.

Consumer protection. The 24-hour National Problem Gambling Helpline, the deposit-limit and self-exclusion tools, and the new PlaySafe Alliance are the current consumer-protection layer, built through a mix of regulator action and industry initiative. Codifying consumer-protection requirements in statute would make them mandatory baseline law rather than a combination of memoranda and voluntary industry standards — harder to dilute and uniform across all operators.

"A patchwork of memoranda can be unwound one memorandum at a time. A comprehensive law cannot. The industry helping to draft it understands exactly that — certainty is worth more to an incumbent than looseness."

PH Gaming Intel analysis

Why the dominant operator is in the room

That DigiPlus sits on the technical working group is the analytically revealing detail. Industry representation in legislative drafting is common and not inherently improper, but it is never neutral. The operator helping to write the rules writes rules it can live with — and, ideally, rules it can meet more comfortably than its competitors can. This is the same pattern visible across the sector's recent regulatory development: DigiPlus supporting the rebate cap that favors scale, leading the responsible-gaming alliance that strengthens the regulate-rather-than-ban argument, and now seated at the table where the comprehensive framework is being drafted. These are three expressions of one coherent strategy — shaping the regulatory settlement the sector is moving toward, from the position of the operator most able to thrive under it.

The certainty a comprehensive law offers is worth more to the incumbent than the current looseness. Statutory rules that DigiPlus can meet, codified and durable, entrench the market structure in which it already leads. A long tail of smaller operators, by contrast, faces a rising compliance baseline that scale makes easier to clear — the same consolidation pressure that the minimum fee and the rebate cap already apply, now potentially written into primary law.

The framework versus the ban

The comprehensive framework does not exist in a vacuum. It is being drafted while the Senate Committee on Games and Amusement hears a slate of bills under the Anti-Online Gambling Act umbrella, several proposing a total ban, with Senator Erwin Tulfo championing prohibition. The two efforts are opposing answers to the same question. The framework says: online gambling continues, under stronger and unified rules. The ban says: online gambling stops. Both are live in the same legislature at the same time.

Understood this way, the comprehensive drafting effort is partly the licensed sector's structured alternative to prohibition — the affirmative case that the harms can be managed through a robust legal framework, offered as the reasonable middle against the ban camp's maximal position. The PlaySafe Alliance supplies the self-regulation evidence; the comprehensive framework supplies the statutory architecture; together they form the regulate-and-formalize platform that the industry is advancing against Tulfo's prohibition platform. Which prevails will define the sector for a decade.

It is worth being clear-eyed about the stakes on both sides. A comprehensive framework, if it favors scale and is shaped by the dominant operator, risks codifying a concentrated market under rules written partly by its biggest beneficiary. A total ban, on the evidence of the 2024 POGO experience and the resurgent cash-and-scam underground that followed, risks pushing activity into unlicensed and offshore channels where there is no consumer protection at all. Neither outcome is costless, and the comprehensive framework's drafters are betting that a formalized legal market, whatever its concentration, is the lesser harm.

The World Cup backdrop

The timing sharpens every tension in the story. The framework is being drafted, and the ban is being debated, precisely as the FIFA World Cup — kicking off June 11 — drives Philippine betting volume to its annual peak and floods consumer feeds with gambling advertising, both licensed and offshore. The marketing-restriction pillar of the framework is being written against a live demonstration of exactly the advertising intensity it would govern. The consumer-protection pillar is being drafted while a tournament-driven surge of new and casual bettors enters the market. The ban camp, for its part, can point to the same surge as evidence of the harm it wants to prohibit. The World Cup is not just background; it is the real-time stress test that both sides of the legislative argument are watching.

The bottom line

A comprehensive iGaming law would be the most consequential single development in Philippine online gaming regulation since the sector was formalized — the moment the patchwork of memoranda becomes durable statute. It would codify payment-channel controls, marketing restrictions, and consumer protection into one framework, raise the compliance baseline in ways that favor scale, and give the licensed sector the certainty it values. It is being drafted with the dominant operator in the room and against a Senate camp that would rather ban the activity entirely.

For now it is a drafting effort, not a law, and the distance between a technical working group and an enacted statute is long and politically contested. But the direction is unmistakable. The Philippines is deciding, in these months and in this legislature, whether its online gambling future is a formalized and concentrated legal market or a prohibition that pushes the activity underground. The comprehensive framework is the licensed sector's bid for the former. The World Cup is the backdrop against which the choice is being made.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the comprehensive iGaming framework being drafted?
The Senate and PAGCOR are jointly drafting a single comprehensive law to govern the Philippine online gaming sector, replacing the current system of individual PAGCOR memoranda and circulars with one unified statutory framework. A technical working group — which includes industry representation from DigiPlus — is developing the legislation, with reported focus areas including tighter controls on payment channels, restrictions on marketing and advertising, and strengthened consumer protection. The aim is a comprehensive regulatory framework rather than the current piecemeal approach.
Why does the licensed industry want a comprehensive law?
The current regulatory environment governs online gaming through a stream of separate PAGCOR memoranda — on fees, rebate caps, KYC, advertising, and more — that can change quickly and are not anchored in primary legislation. That creates regulatory uncertainty that complicates long-term investment. A comprehensive law would give the licensed sector statutory certainty: clearer rules, a more stable basis for investment, and a legislative settlement that is harder to reverse than a memorandum. For the dominant operators, codified rules they can meet are preferable to ongoing uncertainty or an outright ban.
How does the framework relate to the Senate's total-ban bills?
The comprehensive framework and the total-ban bills represent two opposing answers to the same question of how the Philippines should handle online gambling. The framework embodies the regulate-and-formalize position: online gambling continues under a stronger, unified set of rules. The total-ban bills, championed by Senator Erwin Tulfo within the Anti-Online Gambling Act hearings, embody prohibition. Both are live in the Senate simultaneously, and the comprehensive drafting effort is in part the licensed sector's structured alternative to the ban.
What would change for players and operators under the new framework?
Based on the reported focus areas, a comprehensive iGaming law would likely tighten how players can fund accounts (payment-channel controls building on the 2025 e-wallet delinking), restrict how operators advertise and promote (extending the logic of the rebate and cashback cap), and codify consumer-protection requirements such as deposit limits, self-exclusion, and problem-gambling support. For operators, it would raise the compliance baseline and favor those with the infrastructure to meet it; for players, it would mean a more tightly controlled, better-supervised legal market.

Sources

VY

Vivian Yu, Editor-in-Chief

Vivian covers gaming regulation and policy across the Philippines and Southeast Asia. She previously reported on fintech and digital economy for BusinessWorld and has covered the POGO-to-PIGO transition since 2024. Based in Manila.

AnalysisRegulationLegislationPAGCORDigiPlus