President Ruto Signs Gambling Control Bill Into Law

President William Ruto has assented to the Gambling Control Bill (National Assembly Bill No. 70 of 2023), officially enacting a modern legal framework for the regulation of gambling in Kenya.

The Bill, now Act, was sponsored by the Leader of the Majority Party and Member for Kikuyu Constituency, Kimani Ichung’wah.

In the National Assembly, it was passed with amendments on 6th December 2023 and passed with amendments in the Senate on 8th October 2024.

The National Assembly, however, rejected the Senate’s amendments on 16th January 2025.

A Mediation Committee appointed by the Speakers of the Houses of Parliament and reached an agreement on a mediated version of the Bill, which was subsequently approved by the Senate on 23rd July 2025 and by the National Assembly on 31st July 2025.

What’s new under Gambling Control Act?

The Act establishes a comprehensive legal framework for the regulation of gambling in Kenya, with emphasis on safe gambling principles.

It seeks to regulate betting, casinos, and other forms of gambling, as well as the authorization of prize competitions, public lotteries, and media promotions.

President William Ruto with National Assembly Speaker Moses Wetang’ula after the signing of the Betting Control Bill on August 6, 2025. Photo: Parliament of Kenya/Facebook.

The Act also establishes the Gambling Regulatory Authority, tasked with licensing and regulating the gambling sector.

The Authority will be managed by a Board mandated to develop standards and norms for betting, lotteries, and casinos, regulate and control gambling activities, issue licenses for gambling activities, monitor socio-economic patterns of gambling and advise county governments on gambling regulation

In addition, the Gambling Regulatory Authority will now be mandated to collaborate with the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) to establish a monitoring system for tax compliance.

The Act repeals the Betting, Lotteries and Gaming Act, Cap. 131, but preserves the tax-related provisions.

This means the provisions on betting tax, lottery tax, gaming tax, and prize competition tax shall continue to apply until new tax laws are enacted, ensuring no legislative gap.

Further, the Bill seeks to provide a revenue-generation avenue for the government.

Notably, 15% of gross gambling revenue is remitted to the Sports, Arts and Social Development Fund to promote culture, sports, and social development.

To mitigate the harms of gambling, the Bill introduces provisions such as public sensitisation, self-exclusion for addicts, strict licensing requirements, advertising restrictions, and a ban on gambling by minors.

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