Indonesia has reportedly blocked access to Polymarket, the blockchain-based prediction market platform, as part of a broader crackdown on online gambling tied to political betting activity.
The Indonesian government moved to restrict the platform in an effort to eradicate online gambling, according to state news agency Antara. The action specifically targeted Polymarket’s political event contracts, which allowed users to wager on outcomes related to Indonesian leadership.
Reports indicate the block was prompted by prediction markets that featured bets on whether Indonesia’s president would leave office. CoinTelegraph reported that bets on the president’s exit were a central trigger for the enforcement action.
Why political betting drew regulatory action
The ban centers on political betting specifically, not a blanket prohibition on cryptocurrency or blockchain technology. Indonesian regulators appear to have drawn a distinction between general crypto trading activity and markets that allow wagering on sensitive political outcomes.
Election and governance-linked prediction markets sit in a higher-sensitivity category for regulators worldwide. Contracts that let users bet on a sitting president’s departure raise concerns about market manipulation, public order, and the potential to monetize political instability.
Indonesia’s communications ministry, Komdigi, published details of the action through its official portal, framing the block as part of ongoing efforts against illegal online gambling platforms rather than as a crypto-specific measure. The distinction matters as governments across the region continue developing stablecoin and digital asset frameworks that treat financial products and gambling products under separate regulatory tracks.
What this means for Polymarket users and prediction markets
Indonesian users have lost access to the platform. Polymarket operates on the Polygon blockchain and requires users to hold crypto to participate, which already limited its reach in markets with lower crypto adoption.
The restriction adds Indonesia to the list of jurisdictions where Polymarket faces access limitations. The platform was already unavailable to U.S. users following a 2022 settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, highlighting persistent compliance challenges facing event-based prediction markets across borders.
For crypto platforms operating across multiple jurisdictions, Indonesia’s action underscores the risk that politically sensitive contract offerings can attract enforcement even where broader crypto activity remains permitted. As governments evaluate crypto payment integrations and regulatory guardrails, prediction markets face a distinct set of objections rooted in gambling law rather than securities regulation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.





