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Czech Republic Orders ISPs to Block Polymarket

The Czech Republic has ordered internet service providers to block Polymarket, directing local ISPs to cut off access to the crypto-based prediction market within 15 days as part of a national crackdown on unauthorized online gambling operators.

What the Czech Republic's Block Order Means for Polymarket

The action is an order aimed squarely at internet service providers rather than a routine advisory, requiring them to restrict access to Polymarket at the network level, as reported by crypto.news. For related coverage, see Czech Central Bank Invests $18M in Coinbase Shares.

Polymarket appears on the Czech Finance Ministry's official register of prohibited internet games, the mechanism the state uses to designate platforms that operate without a domestic license, according to the ministry's published list. For related coverage, see Czech National Bank Acquires $18M Coinbase Shares in Q2.

The blocking regime is grounded in Czech gambling legislation that empowers authorities to compel ISPs to restrict access to unlicensed operators, under the country's 2017 gaming statute.

How the ISP Restriction Could Affect Users and Platform Access

An ISP-level block typically affects how users inside the issuing jurisdiction reach a site, so the immediate practical effect is reduced or interrupted access to Polymarket for users in the Czech Republic.

The confirmed consequence here is the access restriction itself. The order does not, on the available evidence, establish app removals, fines, or criminal exposure for users, and those outcomes should not be assumed.

Polymarket already limits availability in a number of jurisdictions and publishes the regions where its service is restricted, on its geographic restrictions page. The Czech directive adds a state-mandated network block on top of any platform-side controls.

Why the Polymarket Block Matters for Crypto Prediction Markets

Polymarket sits at the intersection of crypto, online prediction markets, and gambling regulation, which is why a national move against it draws attention beyond a single platform. A state ordering ISPs to cut off access signals tougher oversight pressure on crypto-adjacent services.

The decision fits a wider pattern of Czech authorities taking a hands-on posture toward crypto, a stance also visible in the central bank's own market activity, from its test allocation into bitcoin to a broader purchase of bitcoin and other crypto assets for evaluation.

That same institution has extended its exposure to the sector through equities, investing in Coinbase shares, underscoring that Czech engagement with crypto runs alongside, not against, its willingness to restrict specific platforms it deems unlicensed.

For prediction-market operators, the takeaway is regulatory: platforms that blend crypto settlement with wagering-style contracts can be classified under existing gambling law and blocked at the ISP layer, a risk that is not confined to one country.

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.