Spain Moves to Block Polymarket and Kalshi in Crackdown on Unlicensed Prediction Markets

Spain's gambling regulator moved on 26 May 2026 to block two major prediction market platforms, ordering internet service providers to deny access to Polymarket and Kalshi on grounds that both were operating without the licence required under Spanish betting law. The Dirección General de Ordenación del Juego cited a failure to protect minors and self-excluded gamblers, framing the action as routine enforcement rather than a novel regulatory experiment.
The blocking adds Spain to a short list of national authorities that have taken action against prediction market operators. Polymarket, which allows users to trade shares on the outcomes of real-world events, has faced repeated scrutiny from multiple jurisdictions. The platforms were unavailable to Spanish users by evening on 26 May, according to reports monitoring the access restrictions.
The regulatory basis for the action
Spain's DGOJ stated that both Polymarket and Kalshi lacked the authorisation required to operate a gambling or betting service under the country's gambling legislation. The regulator's public position made no distinction between the two platforms, treating each as falling squarely within the licensing framework for digital betting products. The order directed ISPs to implement technical blocks preventing Spanish users from accessing the platforms.
The argument centres on how prediction markets generate revenue. Both platforms take a percentage of trading volume as a fee—mechanics that, in the DGOJ's view, constitute a form of wagering regardless of the financial-instrument framing applied by the companies. Polymarket's structure in particular has attracted scrutiny because users fund positions with USDC stablecoin and the platform takes a cut of the volume; that fee model has been central to gambling authority complaints in several jurisdictions.
Kalshi, by contrast, has operated under CFTC oversight in the United States after winning regulatory approval there. The distinction appeared to carry no weight with Madrid, which applied Spanish law to any service accessible from Spanish territory regardless of its compliance status elsewhere.
A growing list of flashpoints
The Spanish action follows similar moves by other national regulators, though the thread sources do not specify which authorities or when. What is clear is that prediction markets occupy an increasingly contested regulatory space across multiple jurisdictions simultaneously. Polymarket has been the most frequent target: it processed an estimated $1 billion in trading volume across the 2024 US election cycle and has since attracted regulatory attention in France and beyond.
The platforms present different profiles. Polymarket operates with minimal KYC and no formal regulatory approval, positioning itself as a decentralised protocol for event trading. Kalshi took the opposite route, seeking and obtaining CFTC registration in the United States. That compliance record appears not to have shielded it from action in Spain, where the question of foreign regulatory equivalence does not arise.
The sources do not indicate whether either platform received formal notice or warning before the blocking order. The DGOJ's statement presented the action as enforcement of existing law rather than a new policy determination.
What the platforms are actually doing
Prediction markets allow users to buy and sell contracts tied to future events—election results, economic data releases, corporate earnings. A contract paying $1 if an event occurs trades below that level when the market considers it probable but not certain. Traders use prices as signals about likely outcomes; the mechanism resembles a betting exchange more than a securities exchange, though operators resist the gambling label.
The core commercial activity is identical across platforms: the operator takes a fee on every trade, users stake money on outcomes, and the house does not participate as a counterparty. That fee structure is what gambling regulators in Spain and elsewhere point to when they argue the services require a betting licence. Financial regulators in jurisdictions where prediction markets have obtained approval have taken the opposite view, treating the contracts as commodities or financial instruments.
The ambiguity is structural, not incidental. Prediction markets sit at the intersection of two regulatory traditions that were not designed to handle the same product simultaneously. Spain has made its choice; other jurisdictions have made different ones. The platforms now operate under a patchwork of national decisions, none of which provides a definitive answer about what they are.
Stakes and what comes next
For the platforms, the immediate cost is commercial: Spain is a market of roughly 47 million people with a well-developed online gambling sector. The blocking removes access for Spanish users and undermines any revenue derived from trading activity within the jurisdiction. For regulators, the action establishes precedent for how aggressively to interpret existing gambling law against novel products.
The longer question is whether prediction markets can achieve regulatory accommodation anywhere without redesigning their fee models. Several jurisdictions have granted licences to event-contract platforms; none has resolved the underlying definitional dispute. Until that dispute is settled—either through legislation that creates a new product category or through a definitive court ruling on the gambling-versus-instrument question—the pattern of national enforcement actions is likely to continue.
For Spanish users who accessed Polymarket during peak event cycles, the practical effect is straightforward: the service is no longer available from a Spanish IP address. For the platforms, the strategic challenge is more complex. A service designed to be borderless keeps running into borders.
Spain's DGOJ ordered the blocking of Polymarket and Kalshi on 26 May 2026, citing unlicensed gambling operations. Both platforms were inaccessible to Spanish users by the evening of the same day. This desk noted that wire coverage framed the story as a straightforward enforcement action; the structural question of how gambling law applies to financial-event contracts received less attention than the individual regulatory decisions.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/CryptoBriefing/12345