India’s online gaming crackdown accelerated again on March 20, 2026, when authorities blocked 300 more betting and gambling websites and mobile apps. The move pushed the total number of blocked entities far higher and showed how quickly enforcement was hardening after the 2025 law.
Moneycontrol, citing PTI, reported that the blocked group included online casinos, betting exchanges, roulette-style offerings, peer-to-peer betting platforms, and other money-led formats operating outside the permitted framework. The update landed just weeks before the May 1 start date for the full 2026 rules, so the timing was hard to miss.
Why this action stood out
The significance was not just the number. It was the signal. By March, the government was no longer talking only about what the law allowed in theory. It was actively removing access to platforms seen as illegal under the new regime. That made the difference between “policy direction” and visible market enforcement.
For fantasy sports and rummy audiences, the move also reinforced something users had already begun to notice: old assumptions about what could quietly keep operating were becoming harder to defend. Search traffic was already shifting toward terms like alternatives, APK access, withdrawal clarity, and product status. The March action pushed that shift further.
What it means now
The immediate takeaway is that enforcement is not limited to one category or one headline brand. If a platform falls into the prohibited money-game side of the framework, the combination of blocking powers, payment restrictions, and public pressure can move quickly.
That is why March 20 remains an important checkpoint in the 2026 timeline. It showed that the post-ban market was not settling into a quiet grey zone. It was moving into a tighter, faster enforcement phase.
Source used for this update: Moneycontrol / PTI report published on March 20, 2026.