Chile’s land-based casino operators are preparing for a regulated iGaming market that could bring online betting into the legal mainstream.
Online Betting Is Already Here
Chile is still working through its online gambling bill, but players have not waited for lawmakers to catch up. Offshore betting sites have already built a large audience, while local casino groups are now eyeing the same digital space they once criticised.
According to iGamingFuture, Yield Sec estimated that 3,816 online betting sites operated in Chile in 2024, generating around US$3.1 billion in gross gaming revenue. That is a huge market to leave in legal limbo.
Dreams Looks Ready for the Shift
Dreams S.A. is the operator to watch. The company runs major venues such as Monticello, Dreams Temuco and Dreams Iquique, and it has already tested online betting through Solbet in Peru.
Enjoy S.A. and Marina del Sol are also likely to pay close attention if Chile opens a licensing process. For land-based casinos, online gambling is no longer a threat to complain about. It is a business they cannot afford to miss.
The Bill Could Reshape the Market
Chile’s proposed framework would create a licensed online betting and gaming market overseen by the gambling regulator. Operators would need to be incorporated locally, meet liquidity checks, disclose ownership and follow responsible gambling rules.
For players, that could mean safer deposits, clearer withdrawal rules and actual complaint channels. That is a major upgrade from using offshore sites that can disappear, delay payments or change terms with little warning.
Taxes Could Decide Who Wins
The tax model may be the deal-breaker. Chile wants VAT, a 20% specific gambling tax, a 1% responsible gambling contribution and a 2% payment from sports betting revenue to fund sport.
That could raise useful public money, but there is a catch. If legal operators are taxed too heavily, they may offer weaker odds and smaller bonuses than offshore rivals. Players are practical. They will not choose the legal site just because it has nicer paperwork.
Casino Operators Bring Baggage
The push from casino groups also comes with a shadow. Chile’s competition watchdog has accused Dreams, Enjoy and Marina del Sol of collusion in past casino licence tenders, allegations the companies must still answer.
That matters because Chile cannot let the online market become a private club for existing casino giants. A healthy iGaming market needs real competition, not the same few names moving from casino floors to mobile screens.
What Players Should Watch
The big questions now are simple. Will offshore brands be allowed to apply? Will advertising be tightly restricted? Can licensed sites offer strong enough odds and bonuses to pull players away from unregulated platforms?
Chile has a chance to build a safer online gambling market that still feels worth using. If lawmakers strike the right balance, players could gain better protection without losing choice. If they get it wrong, the offshore market will keep smiling.













