Our Expert in United Arab Emirates
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Last reviewed: 24 May 2026
Understanding how to advertise gambling in UAE markets became a pressing operational question on 18 February 2026, when Google Ads updated its Gambling and Games policy to permit advertisements from entities authorised by the General Commercial Gaming Regulatory Authority (GCGRA). That platform change sits alongside the GCGRA’s own Advertising Standards, a detailed set of content, disclosure and targeting rules that every operator, agency and affiliate must satisfy before a single impression is served. The result is a dual-layer compliance framework: one imposed by the regulator and one enforced by each advertising platform.
This guide walks compliance officers, in-house counsel and marketing teams through every step, from securing GCGRA authorisation and configuring ad accounts to avoiding the criminal and administrative penalties that attach to non-compliant gambling advertising in the UAE.
The short answer is yes, but only if you hold authorisation from the GCGRA and comply with its Advertising Standards, as well as the specific policies of every platform on which you intend to run campaigns. Under the Google Ads policy update effective 18 February 2026, advertisers promoting internet-based gambling and sports betting must demonstrate that they are authorised by the GCGRA before their ads are approved to serve in the UAE. Entities that lack GCGRA authorisation remain prohibited from running gambling advertisements on Google and will face immediate ad disapproval.
The same principle applies on Meta (Facebook and Instagram) and across programmatic, out-of-home (OOH), and influencer channels: the gambling advertising requirements in the UAE start with the regulator, not the platform. If your organisation does not hold, or is not in the process of obtaining, GCGRA authorisation, the lawful answer to “are you allowed to advertise gambling?” in this jurisdiction is no. The sections below explain how to move from that starting position to full compliance.
Gambling has historically been prohibited under UAE federal law. The UAE Penal Code contains provisions that criminalise participation in games of chance, and individual Emirates have reinforced those restrictions through local legislation. As legal commentary from Al Tamimi & Company has noted, the prohibition has traditionally been broad, covering both operators and participants, and extending to advertising or promotion of gambling activities. For anyone asking whether betting is allowed in the UAE in a general sense, the baseline legal answer remains that unauthorised gambling is unlawful.
The establishment of the General Commercial Gaming Regulatory Authority (GCGRA) introduced a regulated exception to the blanket prohibition. The GCGRA operates as the federal regulator responsible for licensing, supervising and setting standards for commercial gaming in the UAE. Under this framework, entities that obtain the requisite licences and authorisations may lawfully offer, and advertise, regulated gaming products. The GCGRA Advertising Standards document, amended in June 2024, provides the detailed rules that govern how authorised operators may promote their products. It is this regulatory carve-out that makes lawful gambling advertising possible for the first time, and it is the reason global platforms such as Google have updated their policies to accommodate UAE-authorised entities.
For operators exploring whether online gambling in Dubai or other Emirates can be marketed, the answer hinges entirely on GCGRA authorisation status.
The GCGRA Advertising Standards apply to every entity involved in the promotion of commercial gaming products within the UAE. This includes:
Any entity that falls within these categories and intends to advertise gambling products must obtain prior authorisation from the GCGRA or operate under the umbrella of an authorised licensee’s approval.
The GCGRA Advertising Standards set out clear boundaries on advertising content. Compliant advertisements must:
Advertisements that glamorise excessive gambling, suggest gambling as a solution to financial difficulty, or imply guaranteed outcomes are explicitly prohibited under the GCGRA Advertising Standards.
Every gambling advertisement served in the UAE must include specific disclosures mandated by the GCGRA. These include:
These requirements apply across all channels, digital, broadcast, print and OOH. Operators should review the full GCGRA Advertising Standards PDF for the complete list of required disclosure elements.
Before you can advertise gambling in the UAE on any platform, you must secure authorisation from the GCGRA. The process below reflects the requirements set out in the GCGRA’s published standards and regulatory guidance.
Applicants should prepare a comprehensive submission package. Based on the GCGRA’s published requirements, the typical documentation includes:
Industry observers expect the GCGRA review cycle to take several weeks from submission of a complete application. Incomplete submissions are likely to extend the timeline significantly. Applicants should anticipate requests for additional information, particularly around AML/CTF arrangements and responsible-gambling controls, and build buffer time into campaign launch schedules. Where an application is refused, the GCGRA’s published framework provides for the applicant to seek clarification and, where grounds exist, to submit a revised application addressing the regulator’s concerns. Early engagement with a UAE gaming lawyer is strongly recommended to ensure the initial submission is complete and addresses known regulatory expectations.
Obtaining GCGRA authorisation is not the end of the compliance process, it is the beginning. Authorised entities must:
Failure to meet post-authorisation obligations may result in suspension or revocation of advertising authorisation, with consequent disruption to live campaigns across all platforms.
GCGRA authorisation unlocks the regulatory gate. Each advertising platform then imposes its own verification and operational requirements. The table below provides a quick-reference comparison, followed by detailed guidance for each channel.
| Requirement | Google Ads (UAE 2026) | Meta / Facebook & Instagram |
|---|---|---|
| Authorisation required | GCGRA-authorised entities only (policy update 18 Feb 2026) | Advertiser authorisation; must comply with local laws and Meta’s gambling authorisation programme |
| Landing page checks | Required: legal notices, age-gating, Arabic content rules | Required: local law compliance; clear landing page policies |
| Targeting restrictions | No targeting minors; geo-fencing to UAE; documentation proof | No targeting minors; documentation of permission and geo-targeting rules |
| Creative review | Automated + manual policy review; responsible-gambling messaging required | Automated review against ad standards; responsible-gambling disclaimers expected |
Sources: Google Ads Help, Update to Gambling and games policy: UAE; Meta Transparency Center, Online Gambling and Games; GCGRA Advertising Standards.
Following its 18 February 2026 update, Google now permits gambling advertisements in the UAE, but exclusively from entities authorised by the GCGRA. To run campaigns, advertisers must complete Google’s gambling certification process, which requires submission of proof of GCGRA authorisation. Once certified, advertisers must ensure that every campaign meets the following sports gambling advertising requirements and general conditions:
Ads that fail Google’s policy review will be disapproved, and repeated violations may result in account suspension.
Meta requires advertisers promoting gambling to obtain prior written authorisation through its platform-specific approval process. Advertisers must demonstrate that they hold valid local authorisation, in this case, GCGRA authorisation, and comply with Meta’s own advertising standards for online gambling and games. Key requirements include restricting ad targeting to users above the legal age, geo-targeting to the UAE and including clear responsible-gambling disclosures. Meta’s ad review system evaluates creatives against both its global gambling policy and local-law compliance. Advertisers should submit GCGRA documentation proactively during the Meta authorisation application to avoid delays.
Beyond Google and Meta, operators advertising gambling in the UAE must apply the same GCGRA standards to all channels. For programmatic display and video, demand-side platforms (DSPs) should be configured with geo-fencing rules that restrict impressions to authorised Emirates. Publisher agreements should include contractual warranties that ad placements will not appear alongside content targeting minors or in contexts that breach GCGRA content rules. Influencer marketing arrangements require particular care: contracts must include compliance warranties, pre-approval clauses for all gambling-related content, and express prohibitions on claims that gambling guarantees financial returns. Affiliate marketers must operate under the licensed operator’s GCGRA authorisation and may not independently promote gambling products without regulatory cover.
Building a compliant advertising operation requires more than platform configuration. The following checklist summarises the key elements that every creative and campaign must satisfy to meet the gambling advertising requirements in the UAE:
| Required Ad Element | Compliant Example | Non-Compliant Example |
|---|---|---|
| Responsible gambling statement | “Gamble responsibly. For support visit [self-exclusion link].” | No responsible gambling messaging visible |
| Age-gating notice | “21+. Age verification required.” | No age restriction mentioned; imagery appealing to minors |
| Operator identification | GCGRA licence number displayed on landing page | No operator or licence information provided |
| Arabic language disclaimers | Key T&Cs and disclaimers provided in Arabic | English-only disclaimers on Arabic-language placements |
| Accurate odds / promotional terms | “Bonus subject to 30x wagering requirement. T&Cs apply.” | “Win guaranteed!” or “Free money, no conditions!” |
Beyond creative content, operators must implement robust age-verification and consent systems. Landing pages should deploy just-in-time (JIT) age checks before allowing access to gambling content. Self-exclusion links must be prominent and functional.
Evidence retention is critical. Compliance teams should maintain a centralised record of every advertisement served, including the creative asset, targeting parameters, approval documentation, spend data and any platform correspondence. Industry observers expect the GCGRA to require retention periods of at least five years, consistent with international regulatory practice. A written retention policy, specifying what is stored, where, for how long and who is responsible, should form part of every operator’s compliance programme.
Google and Meta enforce their gambling policies through automated review systems backed by manual escalation. Non-compliant ads are disapproved immediately, and the advertiser receives a policy violation notice. Repeated violations trigger escalating consequences: temporary campaign suspension, account-level warnings and, ultimately, permanent account suspension. Reinstating a suspended account typically requires evidence of remediation and re-submission of GCGRA authorisation documentation.
The consequences of non-compliant gambling advertising extend well beyond platform sanctions. The GCGRA holds administrative enforcement powers that may include fines, suspension or revocation of authorisation, and mandatory corrective action. Beyond the regulatory level, UAE criminal law continues to apply. As Al Tamimi & Company has noted, the punishment for gambling in Dubai and the broader UAE can include fines and criminal penalties under the Penal Code. Advertising unlicensed or unauthorised gambling products may expose individuals and companies to prosecution. Any entity that receives a regulatory notice or a platform suspension related to gambling advertising should immediately pause all campaigns, preserve all evidence and engage UAE counsel experienced in gaming regulation to manage the response.
The following before-and-after examples illustrate how to move from a non-compliant advertisement to one that meets GCGRA, Google Ads and Meta requirements.
Example 1, Sports betting display ad
Example 2, Social media promotional post
Example 3, Influencer video script
Operators who delegate advertising activity to agencies, affiliates or influencers should embed compliance obligations into every contractual relationship. Key clauses to include:
These clauses should be reviewed periodically to reflect updates to the GCGRA Advertising Standards and platform policies.
The steps required to lawfully advertise gambling in the UAE can be distilled into a single operational checklist. Operators and agencies should use the following as a baseline, adapting it to the specifics of their GCGRA authorisation:
This guide provides a comprehensive framework, but individual circumstances, licence type, target Emirates, product category and campaign channels, will shape specific compliance requirements. Engaging a qualified UAE gaming lawyer early in the process is the most effective way to avoid regulatory delay, platform sanctions and the serious legal consequences of non-compliant advertising.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Elena Sadovskaya at Inteliumlaw, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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