Uganda Proposes Decoupled Licensing Framework to Manage 93% Online Gambling Shift

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on June 4, 2026
Editorial Standards

☆ Editorial Standards

All news content is produced by qualified journalists and analysts under a published editorial code requiring accuracy, source verification, and editorial review prior to publication.

Advertisers and commercial partners have no influence over news coverage.


News editorial policy · Contact us
✓ Fact-Checked

✓ Fact-Checked

Every article undergoes senior editorial review.

Regulatory and legal reporting is cross-referenced against primary sources including official government and regulatory authority records.

Corrections are issued transparently with a visible update notice.


News fact-check policy
⊘ Independence

⊘ Independence

Gamblers Connect is a B2B iGaming media platform.

Editorial decisions, including what to cover, how to cover it, and what to publish, are made independently by our newsroom.

Commercial partners may purchase publication frequency but cannot influence editorial tone, angle, or content.


News independence policy
↗ Commercial Disclosure

↗ Commercial Disclosure

Gamblers Connect is a B2B media platform. We generate revenue through subscriptions, B2B referral partnerships, directory listings, advertising, and media services.

Gamblers Connect is not a licensed gambling operator, affiliate, or player acquisition channel in any jurisdiction.

We do not earn revenue from player activity, wagers, or deposits.


News commercial disclosure · Contact us

In a sweeping regulatory response to changing consumer spending patterns, Uganda’s gaming board NLGRB is drafting extensive statutory modifications to overhaul the country’s foundational gambling framework.

The national flag of Uganda—displaying its repeating horizontal bands of black, yellow, and red fabric with a central white circular emblem featuring a grey crowned crane bird—waving dynamically.
Uganda’s gaming board, the NLGRB, is separating online and land-based operator licenses to manage a massive market transition where 93% of bets are digital.

The National Lotteries and Gaming Regulatory Board (NLGRB) confirmed that the modern gaming market has completed a massive, structural transition toward interactive digital environments, rendering the historical legal framework obsolete.

Dismantling the Single Stack Licensing System

Sovereign tracking telemetry exposes an overwhelming shift in user distribution: approximately 93% of all gambling volume in Uganda now occurs via online digital platforms, leaving only a marginal 7% localized inside traditional brick-and-mortar establishments. Compliance executives noted that while the original gaming act was written to oversee an explicitly land-based retail network, the disruptive impact of the Covid-19 pandemic permanently pushed the local industry into the interactive space.

To resolve this regulatory gap, the NLGRB has initiated a thorough legislative review with direct oversight from the Solicitor General, the Ministry of Finance, and Parliament. The incoming reforms will completely dismantle the single-stack licensing system, replacing it with a decoupled architecture that issues independent, separate permissions for online operators and physical venues.

Sovereign auditing logs confirm that Uganda’s regulated market currently accommodates 63 licensed entities managing over 2,000 individual retail premises, providing employment for roughly 23,000 Ugandan citizens. However, unapproved offshore sites continue to leak vital tax revenues. Over the past 12 months, the regulator registered 125 formal customer complaints involving Shs 2.66 billion (approximately €605,847) in contested transactions.

Concurrently, regional field enforcement teams executed a massive anti-fraud sweep, seizing 7,800 illegal gaming machines worth Shs 8.77 billion (€1.99 million). Investigators revealed that the black-market equipment had been systematically smuggled across international borders disguised as generic industrial spare parts before being assembled locally. The board has already overseen the physical destruction of seized hardware valued at Shs 6.21 billion (€1.4 million).

Transitioning Beyond Pure Revenue Collection

Denis Mudene Ngabirano, Chief Executive Officer of the NLGRB, emphasized that implementing automated tracking networks is critical to safeguarding the public interest:

“Stronger monitoring systems are being pushed to track machines and transactions more effectively and the regulator’s role goes beyond just revenue collection.”

Richard Kavuma Mutesaasira, Senior Manager for Regulatory Compliance, stated that the rapid adoption of smartphone tech, widespread mobile money payment gateways, and affordable internet connectivity accelerated the market shift past the old law’s limits:

“The spread of mobile phones, internet access, and mobile money has sped up the change, while the old law did not cover online gambling properly.”

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

Sources
Source documentation not yet available for this article
Our editorial team is in the process of verifying and documenting sources for this content.
Mentioned in this Article