I&B Ministry
MeitY unveils light touch online gaming rules, effective 1 May
Most games exempt from registration; 90 day classification, 10 year validity norms
MUMBAI: Game on, but not under a heavy hand, India’s online gaming rulebook just got a softer reset. The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology has introduced a revised regulatory framework for the sector, adopting what it calls a “light-touch” approach that keeps most online social games outside mandatory registration or classification requirements.
Announced by MeitY Secretary S. Krishnan, the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Rules, 2026 are set to come into force on May 1, operationalising the provisions of the PROG Act, 2025 while attempting to strike a balance between oversight and ease of doing business.
At the centre of the framework is a newly constituted Online Gaming Authority, a digital office under MeitY that brings together representatives from finance, information and broadcasting, health, sports, power, justice, and external affairs signalling a cross-sectoral approach to governance in a space that cuts across policy domains.
The rules redraw the regulatory boundaries by clearly distinguishing between prohibited real-money gaming formats and permissible categories such as online social games and e-sports. Crucially, classification or “determination” of a game will not be automatic. It will be triggered only in three cases: when initiated by the authority, when a service provider applies (especially for e-sports), or when the government notifies specific categories.
Once triggered, the determination process will follow a 90 day timeline, with outcomes issued through formal orders that apply only to the specific game and publisher, rather than across similar titles.
Registration, too, has been narrowed in scope. It will apply only to notified categories involving financial risk or large-scale participation, along with all e-sports titles. As of now, no categories have been formally notified, with the provision described as enabling rather than mandatory.
Beyond classification, the framework leans heavily on compliance and user safety. Platforms will be required to implement technical and behavioural safeguards, alongside a two-tier grievance redressal system and an appellate route through the authority. Additional obligations include data retention, cybersecurity standards, financial transaction monitoring, and periodic reporting extending compliance responsibilities to banks and financial institutions as well.
Structurally, the rules simplify earlier drafts by removing provisions such as a separate section on promoting e-sports and the concept of “material change,” reducing room for interpretational ambiguity. The authority itself will comprise six members, with stricter quorum norms and faster emergency response timelines cut from seven days to three.
Registration validity has been extended to up to 10 years, while suspension and cancellation processes now include a mandatory opportunity for hearing, reflecting a more formalised enforcement mechanism.
The ministry said the revisions incorporate feedback from around 2,500 stakeholders, spanning industry, academia, think tanks, and legal experts many of whom had flagged concerns around definitions, governance structures, and regulatory clarity.
With the rules kicking in from 1 May, the message is clear, the government is stepping into the gaming arena, but with a lighter touch at least for now.
I&B Ministry
MIB reiterates IPTV self declaration rules, warns against agents
Advisory dated April 22, 2026 flags no fee, no third party role in filings.
MUMBAI: Before the screens light up, the paperwork must too and the government is reminding players not to outsource the basics. The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting has issued a fresh advisory to IPTV service providers, reiterating the mandatory process for filing self-declarations before launching services and cautioning against the use of unauthorised intermediaries.
The advisory, dated April 22, 2026, anchors its guidance in the IPTV policy framework issued on September 8, 2008. Under these rules, all telecom licensees and cable operators including MSOs and LCOs are required to submit a self-certified declaration prior to commencing IPTV operations.
The process, the ministry emphasised, is deliberately simple. Providers must file the declaration in a prescribed format with the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, the Department of Telecommunications, and Telecom Regulatory Authority of India. The form captures basic operational details such as licence or registration information, proposed start date, service area, and network infrastructure.
Importantly, the ministry underscored that the filing requires no third-party assistance and carries no fee effectively shutting the door on consultants or agents claiming to “fast-track” approvals.
In a pointed warning, the advisory clarified that no external entity has any role in processing IPTV self-declarations and cannot expedite submissions. Stakeholders have been advised to engage only with designated government officials and remain cautious of unauthorised facilitators.
For queries, operators have been directed to reach out through the ministry’s official communication channels. The advisory was issued by Shiv Ram Meena, Under Secretary to the Government of India.
In a sector where compliance can often feel layered, the message is straightforward: file it yourself, file it right, and don’t pay for what’s meant to be free.








