Betfred is temporarily shutting off its Ireland online operation as Ireland moves into a tougher licensing era under the Gambling Regulatory Authority of Ireland.
Irish Players Get a June 30 Cut-Off
Betfred has told Irish customers that account access will be disabled from June 30, with users urged to withdraw any remaining balances before the switch-off. The operator also warned players not to place bets that would settle after June 29, a small but rather important detail for anyone eyeing long-range markets.
The company framed the move as a temporary pause while it lines up with Ireland’s new gambling rules. Betfred has not given a return date, though its message to customers suggested the operator wants to come back once the licensing picture is clearer.
Open Bets Are the Awkward Bit
The obvious headache is ante-post betting. Anyone holding longer-term wagers, including bets on events finishing after the cut-off, will want clear answers from Betfred rather than corporate fog.
According to the report, Betfred is expected to honour ante-post bets, with settlement continuing as normal during the suspension. The company has also said it will contact customers about open positions, which should matter more to players than any polished statement about market alignment.
Ireland’s New Regulator Raises the Bar
The move comes as Ireland shifts gambling oversight to the Gambling Regulatory Authority of Ireland (GRAI), the country’s new regulator for betting, gaming, gambling and certain lottery activity. GRAI says betting licence applications are now open for in-person betting, remote betting and remote betting intermediary licences.
The new regime gives the regulator sharper tools than the old patchwork system. Breaches can lead to licence suspension or revocation, criminal prosecution, and financial penalties of up to €20 million or 10% of turnover.
Betfred’s Irish Stay Has Been Short So Far
Betfred only entered Ireland’s online market in autumn 2024, so this is hardly a legacy giant slamming the shutters after decades on the high street. The company has no retail betting shops in Ireland, leaving its exposure there much smaller than in the UK, where it runs more than 1,300 betting shops.
For regular Irish players, the practical message is simple: withdraw funds, check open bets, and do not assume every familiar brand will glide smoothly through the new licensing era. Some operators will adjust quickly. Others may decide Ireland’s new gambling regulations are more trouble than the market is worth.













