Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced sweeping national restrictions on gambling advertising on Thursday to combat intense political pressure and mounting domestic financial harm stemming from a landmark 2023 parliamentary inquiry. The Albanese administration has faced immense frustration over the dangerous saturation of betting promotions in sports and its correlations to domestic violence.
Starting January 1, 2027, betting logos will be completely stripped from player uniforms and stadium signage. Daytime television broadcasts will also see a strict blackout on gambling promotions during live sporting events.
The legislative package arrives more than 1,000 days after the “you win some, you lose more” inquiry led by the late Labor MP Peta Murphy. Albanese addressed the media at the National Press Club in Canberra on Thursday. He framed the legislation heavily. He called it “the most significant reform on gambling that has ever been implemented” in the nation’s history.
The new regulations enforce a total ban on gambling advertisements during live sports television broadcasts between 6:00 am and 8:30 pm. Non-sport programming during those same hours will be strictly capped at a maximum of three betting ads per hour.
Radio networks face similar restrictions. Stations are now prohibited from playing betting promotions during the morning and afternoon school transit windows, specifically from 8:00 am to 9:00 am and 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm.
Digital advertising faces severe new hurdles. Online ads are banned entirely unless a user is explicitly verified to be over 18, is actively logged into a registered account, and has not opted out of receiving promotions. Furthermore, celebrities and professional athletes are completely banned from appearing in any betting campaigns.
The government is also moving to make sports match-fixing a criminal offense nationwide and will ban online keno “pocket pokies,” according to a detailed report published following the announcement.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has announced a long-delayed crackdown on gambling advertising at the National Press Club.
The reforms are aimed at reducing children’s exposure and breaking the link between sport and betting.
Measures include caps on TV ads, longer blackout… pic.twitter.com/hHiApQUbIH
— 10 News (@10NewsAU) April 2, 2026
Pushback arrived instantly from multiple factions. Health advocates slammed the package as insufficient. The Australian Medical Association and prominent gambling reform advocate Tim Costello heavily criticized the legislation for enacting “partial bans” rather than the total advertising blackout recommended by the Murphy inquiry. Independent MP Kate Chaney dismissed the government’s response entirely. She labeled the policy “big on talk, small on substance.”
The wagering sector issued its own warnings. Responsible Wagering Australia CEO Kai Cantwell expressed deep disappointment with the new laws. Cantwell argued the advertising bans set a “dangerous precedent” that could eventually be weaponized against the alcohol, fast food, and sugary drink industries.
This aggressive pivot reflects a growing movement across the world to break the entrenched cultural link between professional sports and corporate wagering.
What the 2027 Sponsorship Blackout Means for the AFL and NRL
The mandate to strip betting logos from jerseys and stadium signage forces an immediate, multi-million dollar commercial reckoning for major Australian sporting codes. The AFL and NRL now have less than three years to fundamentally restructure their revenue pipelines.
These leagues rely heavily on the lucrative financial injection provided by wagering firms to secure “Category A” sponsorship real estate. Finding replacement industries willing to match those specific financial commitments by the January 2027 deadline will dictate the next era of sports commercialization in the country. The government has deliberately forced the sports sector to decouple from its most profitable, yet culturally toxic, financial partner.
