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Polymarket to get its day in court as South Korea delays decision

ByHannah CollymoreHannah Collymore
2 mins read
Polymarket to get its day in court as South Korea delays decision
  • South Korea has decided to hear Polymarket’s defense before ruling on whether the prediction market violates the country’s gambling laws. 
  • A block would add South Korea to a list of countries already restricting the sector. 
  • Korean police are separately pursuing the country’s first criminal case against local Polymarket bettors following heavy activity around the June 3 election.

 

South Korea’s media regulator, the Korea Communications Standards Commission (KCSC), is considering banning Polymarket in the country, but it will let the company argue its case before deciding.  

The main issue is whether or not the crypto prediction market breaks South Korea’s gambling laws. South Korean law bans nearly all gambling except state-run channels like horse racing and the lottery.

Why does South Korea want to ban Polymarket? 

The Korea Communications Standards Commission (KCSC), a body that polices harmful online content, said on July 6 that it wants to do due diligence before making a decision on whether or not to restrict South Koreans’ access to prediction platforms. 

The KCSC has the authority to order internet providers to block a site outright. 

The committee’s telecommunications deliberation subcommittee has invited Polymarket’s operator to submit a formal response, and only after reviewing that response and related materials will the commission decide if it will request corrective action against the platform.

Polymarket lets users buy YES or NO positions on the outcome of real-world events, including elections and sports matches. Traders put up stablecoins such as USDC to take a side. Critics have long argued the platform functions as speculative betting in all but name, and South Korean law bans nearly all gambling outside a handful of state-run channels like horse racing and the lottery.

Still, the commission said it wants to establish how the service actually works before deciding if it should be illegal. 

If the KCSC concludes Polymarket is running an illegal gambling service, a block would put South Korea alongside other countries with restrictions like France, Germany, Italy, India, Brazil, Australia, Argentina, and Indonesia, according to Cryptopolitan’s earlier reporting. 

Spain’s Consumer Rights Ministry imposed a temporary ban on Polymarket and its rival Kalshi in May over the absence of gambling licenses.

Why are prediction market platforms rejecting the gambling label?

Operators of prediction platforms have pitched them as forecasting tools that surface useful information, but regulators increasingly see users wagering crypto on uncertain outcomes and call it gambling. 

Seoul is one of Asia’s largest crypto markets, and once the KCSC finishes reviewing Polymarket’s response, its decision will signal how it intends to treat the entire category.

For instance, in June, Cryptopolitan reported that South Korean police had opened the nation’s first criminal case targeting local Polymarket users. Cyber units traced transactions to identify who had placed bets following a spike in trading around the June 3 national election. Under Article 246 of the Criminal Act, illegal betting can draw fines of up to 10 million won. 

Prediction markets have grown from a crypto niche into a business with real money behind it. Global trading volume tripled year-over-year to roughly $51 billion in 2025, according to Bernstein data cited by Cryptopolitan. Some analysts even project the market could reach $1 trillion by 2030.

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FAQs

What did South Korea's KCSC decide about Polymarket?

The Korea Communications Standards Commission voted to give Polymarket's operator a chance to submit a formal response before deciding whether to request corrective action, which could include blocking access to the platform in South Korea.

Why is Polymarket being reviewed in South Korea?

South Korean law bans nearly all gambling outside a few state-run options, and critics say Polymarket's trade-on-outcomes model, where users stake USDC and lose their stake if wrong, functions as speculative gambling.

Which other countries have restricted Polymarket?

Spain temporarily banned Polymarket and Kalshi in May over missing gambling licenses, and France, Germany, Italy, India, Brazil, Australia, Argentina, and Indonesia have also restricted access or intensified enforcement, according to Cryptopolitan.

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Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Hannah Collymore

Hannah Collymore

Hannah is a writer and editor with nearly a decade of blog writing and event reporting experience in the crypto space. At Cryptopolitan, Hannah contributes to the news page, reporting and analyzing the latest developments in DeFi, RWA, crypto regulation, AI and frontier tech industries. She graduated from Arcadia university with a degree in Business Administration.

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