From July 17, licensed operators and their media partners must carry blunt risk warnings and stop dressing betting pitches up as expert analysis.
World Cup Coverage Forces the Issue
Brazil’s government is putting tighter controls on betting advertising after the 2026 World Cup turned sports broadcasts into fertile ground for live odds, presenter endorsements and promotional betting tips.
The Finance Ministry announced two new orders covering operators, broadcasters, advertising agencies, influencers and other businesses involved in distributing betting promotions. The rules arrive on July 17, two days before the World Cup final, giving the industry only a week to clean up existing campaigns.
Much of the political heat followed advertising shown during CazéTV’s World Cup coverage. Brazil’s National Consumer Secretariat opened an investigation on June 24 after commentators and presenters blended match analysis with offers from betting brands. CazéTV later said it would adopt a more conservative format and create a clearer divide between editorial coverage and advertising.
A separate media study examined 48 tournament broadcasts and counted 74 live betting suggestions. Forty-five of those selections, or roughly 61%, lost. That is hardly a ringing endorsement for the supposed wisdom being served alongside the football.
The New Rulebook Gets Blunter
Every betting advertisement from an authorised operator will need to carry one of three government warnings. The messages must tell consumers that betting can cause dependency, can result in lost money or should not be treated as an investment.
The warning must be clear, horizontal and legible, taking up at least 10% of the advertisement. The requirement applies across television, radio, websites, social media, sponsorships and other marketing formats.
Brazil’s existing framework already banned claims that gambling provides guaranteed income, easy wealth or a solution to financial trouble. It also required age notices and warnings about gambling-related harm. The new orders sharpen those requirements by prescribing direct language that is harder to bury under a logo, bonus code or rapid-fire terms and conditions.
Operators will also be barred from creating artificial urgency, presenting wagers as an easy route to profit or publishing selective histories of past winners without the less glamorous record of customer losses.
The government is taking aim at the familiar trick of turning a bet into something that sounds closer to financial advice. Calling a boosted accumulator an “opportunity” does not make it an asset class, no matter how polished the graphic looks.
Commentators Can No Longer Sell the Pick
One of the biggest changes affects live sports programming. Commentators, analysts, influencers and other figures presented as experts cannot use their perceived authority to push viewers toward a particular wager or market.
Editorial content may still discuss odds and betting as a subject, but broadcasters cannot blur that discussion with a paid prompt to place a specific bet. Promotional material must be recognisable as advertising rather than slipped into match analysis with a wink and a sponsor code.
That distinction matters during live betting, where odds move quickly and viewers may have only seconds to decide. A presenter describing a selection as the smart play can carry more weight than a standard commercial, particularly when the sales pitch arrives in the middle of genuine tactical analysis.
Brazil’s Finance Ministry had already warned operators and affiliates that betting promotions must be clearly labelled and that licensed companies can be held responsible for marketing carried out by contracted partners.
Media Companies Join the Compliance Net
The second order spreads responsibility beyond the sportsbook. Anyone producing, sponsoring, transmitting, distributing or boosting a betting advertisement must check that the operator is authorised in Brazil before the campaign runs.
Media outlets and online platforms must retain basic advertiser details, including the company name, corporate registration number and licence information. They are expected to compare brands, websites and trading names against the government’s official list of approved operators.
This closes an obvious escape hatch. A broadcaster cannot simply collect the advertising fee and leave the licensing question to the operator. Affiliates and influencers cannot shrug and claim they were only reading the script.
Licensed companies that breach the rules may face fines of up to 20% of revenue, suspension for as long as 180 days or loss of their authorisation in serious repeat cases. Media businesses carrying unlawful promotions may also face consumer-protection penalties.













