Curaçao regulator establishes guidelines for cryptocurrency gambling

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Curaçao: A framework regulating the use of cryptocurrencies for gambling has been presented by the Curaçao Gaming Authority (CGA). Holders of Curaçao business-to-consumer online gaming licenses will face much higher compliance requirements under the new regulation, which will be implemented gradually over the course of the next 12 months.

Every step of the cryptocurrency transaction chain—from player deposits and bets to withdrawals and treasury management—will be subject to new requirements. Because of this, offshore companies who have traditionally disregarded strong treasury and analytics infrastructure will suddenly have to develop systems that satisfy the CGA's new requirements.

The 11-page paper, which CGA marketing and PR advisor Aideen Shortt posted on LinkedIn, details steps that will be implemented gradually over a number of months until mid-2027, though the regulator adds it may decide to expedite deadlines if risks materialize.

The most recent regulations seek to bring Curaçao's supervision of cryptocurrency transactions in gambling into compliance with global anti-money laundering and counterterrorism financing guidelines. Operators must adhere to role restrictions, employing cryptocurrency just for gaming and refraining from serving as exchanges, custodians, or providers of virtual asset services.

A preference for fiat-backed stablecoins, the separation of player, operational, and treasury wallets, and required blockchain analytics for wallet screening and transaction monitoring are further needs. Meme tokens, wrapped assets of unknown provenance, and privacy coins will be scrutinized or excluded. Money associated with mixers, tumblers, or approved addresses is completely prohibited.

Licensees must perform risk assessments and staff training within six months, submit a compliant crypto policy to the CGA portal within three months, and attain complete compliance by June 2027. Wallet segregation, transaction reconciliation, analytics tool deployment, and audit-ready record keeping are all necessary for that last phase of implementation.

The Financial Action Task Force's worldwide standards, such as the Travel Rule and improved transparency measures, are meant to be closely mirrored in the recommendations.