Starting yesterday, 17 November, YouTube has introduced a comprehensive update to its gambling content policy. The changes significantly tighten controls on

Starting yesterday, 17 November, YouTube has introduced a comprehensive update to its gambling content policy. The changes significantly tighten controls on what creators can publish, promote, or monetise, with a specific focus on curbing the rise of unregulated online gambling promotions and protecting younger audiences.
The revised policy now strictly bans creators from directing viewers to any gambling website, app, or service that has not been certified by Google or approved under local laws. This prohibition is sweeping, covering spoken promotions, embedded links, on-screen logos, screenshots, and even casual references to unlicensed operators.
Beyond simple brand promotion, YouTube is targeting the nature of the content itself. The new restrictions apply to casino-style videos and social casino content, even if no real money is changing hands.
Crucially, videos that make financially dangerous claims will be removed. This includes content promising “guaranteed returns,” sharing “loss-recovery tricks,” or making any kind of financial promise to the viewer. These rules apply to all creators, including those linked to legitimate, licensed operators.
YouTube has also implemented stricter access controls. Most gambling content will now sit behind a mandatory sign-in wall, requiring viewers to be at least 18 years of age. While sports betting discussions and some in-person casino content may still be permissible, they are heavily dependent on jurisdiction and context.
The enforcement of these new rules will be applied on a country-by-country basis, respecting local regulatory frameworks.
The update poses an immediate threat to creators who have built audiences around casino-style videos, sweepstakes, or gambling commentary. The consequences for non-compliance include video removals, demonetisation, and permanent channel strikes.
This policy effectively kills the affiliate model for offshore operators on the platform. Creators are advised to immediately audit their back catalogues to remove logos, links, and promo codes for unapproved sites. Even creators who only discuss gambling occasionally must review older videos to ensure they do not contain outdated links or banned brand mentions.
This policy shift from YouTube is the final nail in the coffin for the “wild west” era of gambling streaming. For years, a sub-industry of creators thrived by promoting unregulated, offshore crypto-casinos to massive, often underage, audiences. These streams often featured “fake money” deals where the creator played with house funds to create unrealistic expectations of winning.
By tying content permissions directly to Google certification and local licensure, YouTube is effectively outsourcing its compliance to national regulators. If an operator isn’t on the “white list” in Brazil or the UK, they don’t exist on YouTube.
This will force a massive professionalisation of the sector. The “influencer” marketing channel for gambling will shrink significantly but will become far more valuable for the few licensed operators who can navigate the compliance hurdles. For the black market, however, this closes off one of their most effective customer acquisition funnels, forcing them further into the shadows of the internet.