- Indonesia’s Communications and Digital Ministry blocked access to Polymarket on Friday, classifying the platform as online gambling after a prediction market contract on whether President Prabowo Subianto would leave office early circulated widely on Indonesian social media.
- The ministry said it will also track and monitor social media accounts promoting Polymarket, signaling an enforcement posture that goes beyond simply blocking the website.
- Authorities stated that platforms facilitating wagers on specific event outcomes remain classified as gambling under Indonesian law, regardless of whether they are marketed as “prediction markets.”
- The ban is the latest flashpoint in the global regulatory debate over prediction markets — which are simultaneously attracting mainstream investment interest in the US (where Kalshi and Polymarket are lobbying for expanded legitimacy) and triggering government crackdowns abroad when contracts touch politically sensitive topics.
What Happened?
Indonesia moved swiftly to block Polymarket after a contract speculating on whether President Prabowo Subianto would be removed from office ahead of schedule began circulating on Indonesian social media. The Communications and Digital Ministry classified the platform as online gambling and announced it would actively monitor social media accounts that promote access to it — a notably aggressive enforcement stance compared to simply adding the site to a block list. The ministry’s position is that the “prediction market” framing does not change the underlying legal character of the activity: wagering on the outcome of specific events is gambling under Indonesian law.
Why It Matters?
The Indonesia ban illustrates a core tension in prediction markets’ global expansion: what functions as a liquid information aggregation tool in the US becomes a politically threatening instrument when the underlying contracts touch the stability of a sitting government. Polymarket has already drawn scrutiny in the US over insider trading concerns — a House panel opened an investigation after a soldier was charged with insider trading on a Maduro capture contract — and the SEC has been reviewing whether prediction markets on non-financial events require additional oversight. Governments around the world are watching the US regulatory outcome closely, but countries with less tolerance for political speculation are not waiting: Indonesia’s ban makes it one of the more significant markets to block the platform to date.
What’s Next?
Polymarket will likely be circumvented by Indonesian users via VPN, as has happened with previous platform bans in the country. The more consequential question is whether other governments in Southeast Asia or beyond use Indonesia’s regulatory framing — prediction markets as gambling — as a template for their own bans, particularly if contracts on domestic political events continue to proliferate. In the US, the outcome of the House insider trading investigation and the SEC’s review of event-contract markets will set the global tone for how “prediction market” vs. “gambling” is legally defined. Polymarket’s Washington lobbying push is directly aimed at securing the former classification before regulators default to the latter.
Source: Bloomberg










