South Korea’s media regulator has launched a formal review into whether Polymarket’s prediction market platform constitutes illegal gambling under domestic law, according to a Bloomberg report. The probe marks the latest escalation in a global regulatory crackdown that has already entangled Polymarket in a lengthy dispute with U.S. authorities, pushing the world’s largest prediction market deeper into a legal gray zone that could define the future of on-chain information markets.
South Korea maintains some of the strictest anti-gambling laws in the developed world, extending its jurisdiction to online platforms that target its citizens even if those platforms operate offshore. The country already blocks a sprawling list of gambling sites, and regulatory bodies have increasingly turned their attention to crypto-based services that circumvent traditional financial rails. Earlier this year, a joint report from CoinGecko and Tiger Research revealed that South Korean traders moved over $110 billion in crypto to overseas exchanges in 2025, driven partly by restrictive domestic trading rules. That capital flight has put regulators on high alert, and Polymarket—a platform where users can bet on everything from election outcomes to Fed rate decisions—fits neatly into the enforcement crosshairs. The media regulator’s review could lead to a blacklisting order, making Polymarket inaccessible inside Korea and exposing the platform to legal liability if it continues to serve Korean users.
Polymarket is already no stranger to regulatory heat. In the United States, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has spent years arguing that certain event contracts offered on the platform function as swaps or binary options that should be registered and traded on a designated contract market. A federal judge dealt Polymarket a setback in 2024, and the platform remains locked in a legal standoff that has effectively blocked U.S. users. Yet, at the same time, the regulatory conversation has shifted. CFTC Chair Michael Selig acknowledged that prediction markets can be more accurate than polls, signaling that at least some regulators see value in the data they generate. Polymarket itself has tried to navigate this complexity by confirming plans for a native token and airdrop as part of a broader strategy to re-enter the U.S. market under a more compliant structure. But South Korea’s action introduces a new, non-U.S. front that could compound the company’s legal bills and complicate any clean global expansion.
The central question hanging over Polymarket—and prediction markets generally—is whether they are gambling or a legitimate form of information aggregation. South Korea’s investigation frames the activity squarely as the former, aligning the platform with sports betting and casino games rather than with recognized financial derivatives. This is not merely a semantic dispute. If Korea officially designates Polymarket as an illegal gambling site, it will join a long list of forbidden services, potentially triggering criminal liability for its developers and making it far harder for the platform to attract institutional partnerships or even maintain banking relationships. The threat is especially acute because South Korea has shown a willingness to prosecute crypto entities that circumvent its laws, a reality that shapers the risk calculus for any platform with global ambitions. Other jurisdictions, including the European Union, are also scrutinizing prediction markets, and a coordinated view that these platforms are unlicensed gambling operations would severely narrow the industry’s path to legitimacy.
Polymarket’s troubles extend beyond one company. The prediction market sector has attracted significant attention from major crypto players. Coinbase recently announced a major system update that includes prediction markets, betting that regulated on-chain betting will become a mainstream product. If South Korea and other regulators succeed in classifying these services as gambling, Coinbase and others could face barriers to entry or be forced to carve out entire national markets. The investigation also undermines the narrative that prediction markets are a unique tool for public forecasting. While academics celebrate their accuracy, the legal reality on the ground may simply lump them in with online casinos, denying users the ability to price events transparently. For the crypto industry, which has long argued that blockchain-based markets are distinct, the South Korean action serves as a reminder that the old-world legal categories are not going away without a fight.
South Korea’s move underscores a hard truth: prediction markets are being drawn into a regulatory battle that will be decided not by their utility but by whether they are classified as gambling or as a novel financial instrument. Polymarket’s experience illustrates that being right from a market perspective—its odds often beat polls—does not immunize a platform from legal action. The result is a fragmented global landscape where a service can be illegal in Seoul, blocked in New York, and celebrated by technologists and traders as a superior forecasting tool. That fragmentation will persist until a major jurisdiction writes clear rules that explicitly separate prediction markets from gambling, something no government has yet done. Investors and builders betting on the sector’s growth should watch this case closely; the outcome in South Korea could set a template for how dozens of other countries treat the next wave of on-chain markets.
<p>The post South Korea Probes Polymarket for Gambling Violations, Adding to Global Regulatory Pressure first appeared on Crypto News And Market Updates | BTCUSA.</p>

