South Korea is formally reviewing the blockchain-based prediction market Polymarket to see if it breaks the country’s gambling laws. The Korea Communications Standards Commission (KCSC) started the investigation after concerns that Polymarket’s event-based betting could be considered illegal online gambling. Polymarket will have a chance to respond before a final decision is made.
If the platform is found to have violated local laws, it could be blocked in South Korea. This would be the first major regulatory move against a crypto prediction market in the country.
This review shows South Korea’s careful stance on cryptocurrency, especially when it comes to speculative financial products. The KCSC, which monitors harmful online content, said its telecommunications subcommittee is now looking at Polymarket’s business model and legal status under current gambling laws.
The commission has asked Polymarket to explain its position before making a final decision. Regulators will decide if Polymarket’s prediction markets, where users bet cryptocurrency on real-world events, count as illegal online gambling under South Korean law.
South Korea has some of the strictest gambling rules in the world. Most online betting is illegal, except for a few state-approved activities. Regulators have often acted against unauthorized betting sites, sometimes ordering internet providers to block access to illegal platforms.
Polymarket lets users trade on the outcomes of many real-world events, such as elections, sports, economic news, and global issues. The platform runs on blockchain and uses cryptocurrency for transactions, which sets it apart from regular betting sites. This decentralized setup has also drawn more attention from regulators in different countries.
If the KCSC decides Polymarket has broken South Korean law, it can take action, such as telling internet providers to block the platform. This would make it much harder for people in South Korea to use Polymarket and could lower trading activity from the country.
The global crypto industry is watching this review closely, as it could shape how other countries handle decentralized prediction markets. As these platforms become more popular, regulators everywhere are debating whether to treat them as financial products, information markets, or online gambling.
For Polymarket, the outcome could have implications beyond South Korea. A decision against the platform may encourage regulators in other jurisdictions to examine similar services more closely. Conversely, if the platform successfully defends its operations, it could strengthen arguments that decentralised prediction markets require dedicated regulatory frameworks rather than being assessed solely under existing gambling laws.
The KCSC will announce its decision after looking at Polymarket’s response. Until then, this case is seen as a key test of how governments balance new ideas in decentralized finance with existing gambling rules.
THE BLOCK: South Korea’s media watchdog will give Polymarket a chance to respond before deciding whether to issue corrective measures against the prediction market platform.
Regulators are reviewing whether Polymarket’s service amounts to illegal gambling under South Korean law. pic.twitter.com/CGgCZQ4IyY
— The Block (@TheBlockCo) July 6, 2026
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