Nigeria’s gambling market is too big to ignore—and right now, it’s stuck in a regulatory tug-of-war that nobody can afford to “win” the wrong way. After Nigeria’s Supreme Court knocked out the National Lottery Act in late 2024, the industry expected a clean pivot to state-led regulation. Instead, lawmakers pushed the Central Gaming Bill to re-centralize control—until President Bola Ahmed Tinubu refused assent. Logifuture CMO Ben Cove (a key supplier behind Bet9ja) is betting on common sense in 2026—because investors, operators, and regulators all need the same thing: one compliance story that actually works in the real world. Here’s my operator-grade take on what’s driving the standoff, why it matters, and what a realistic 2026 resolution could look like. Key points
- Nigeria’s Supreme Court nullified the National Lottery Act and confirmed state authority over lotteries/gaming (except FCT).
- Tinubu refused to sign the Central Gaming Bill, rejecting re-centralization and reinforcing the state-led interpretation.
- Operators now need coordination, because multi-state divergence can raise compliance cost and enforcement gaps.
- Ben Cove expects “common sense” in 2026 and warns against an offshore “free-for-all.”
- Even with massive demand, Nigeria remains a long-term investment story, not a quick-return market.
Nigeria’s Gambling Turf War: Why Ben Cove Thinks 2026 Brings Clarity
What happened, and why it matters
Nigeria’s current uncertainty is the product of two very loud signals:
- The Supreme Court reset the constitutional map. In a landmark decision delivered on 22 November 2024, the Supreme Court nullified the National Lottery Act 2005, holding that lotteries and “games of chance” sit under state legislative authority (as residual matters), not the federal government—except in relation to the FCT.
- Tinubu killed the attempted “re-centralization.” In December 2025, President Tinubu declined to sign the Central Gaming Bill, stressing that gambling/lottery regulation is a state matter under Nigeria’s constitutional structure and consistent with the Supreme Court’s ruling.
So yes, the bill’s rejection created clarity on principle (“states lead”). However, it also preserved uncertainty on execution (how Nigeria avoids 36 different compliance realities).
The real friction: Nigeria doesn’t have one regulator problem—it has a coordination problem
From a compliance lens, the Supreme Court ruling didn’t just end a legal argument; it forced operators to rethink structure, licensing, and cost. PwC’s post-judgment note makes the operational pain explicit: NLRC-issued licenses become unenforceable in states, while operators may face duplicative or divergent state requirements and fees unless Nigeria builds a cooperative framework. Meanwhile, state regulators organized themselves into the Federation of State Gaming Regulators of Nigeria (FSGRN) and pushed back hard against any central law they view as unconstitutional. This isn’t academic. If Nigeria fails to coordinate, you get exactly what regulators hate:
- fragmented oversight,
- inconsistent player protection,
- uneven enforcement, and
- an easier runway for offshore or grey operators.
Ben Cove’s position: protect the user, protect the licensed operator
Cove’s point is simple—and frankly, hard to argue with: Nigeria should not become a “free-for-all” where offshore operators grab share, avoid tax, and ignore safer gambling obligations. He also draws a line between regulatory uncertainty and operational resilience. Bet9ja’s footprint (including 20,000+ retail outlets) and multi-state licensing posture give it insulation during the transition. That’s an important subtext: uncertainty hurts new entrants and mid-tier brands more than incumbents. In other words, regulatory limbo quietly accelerates consolidation.
Why investors still hesitate (even with “massive demand”)
Nigeria’s fundamentals are compelling: scale, youth, and constant inflow of new adults. Cove even frames it as “a conveyor belt of consumers,” claiming more than a million people turn 18 every year. However, two realities slow the investor dopamine hit:
- Macro constraints shape wallet size and ROI timelines. Nigeria’s GDP per capita remains relatively low and inflation has been high, which pressures discretionary spend and stretches payback horizons for brand-building.
- Market maturity increases the cost of entry. Cove warns that meaningful entry requires heavy “route to market” investment, and returns won’t be quick—especially as a small group of operators increasingly dominates distribution.
So yes, clearer regulation can act like a “green light.” But the business case still demands patience and a long-term plan.
What “common sense” could look like in 2026
In my view, 2026 only resolves this standoff if Nigeria chooses coordination over conquest. Practically, there are three viable pathways: 1) A state-led harmonization model (most realistic) This is the “federalism-respecting” route: states remain constitutionally in charge, but they align on:
- baseline technical standards,
- AML / safer gambling minimums,
- reporting formats, and
- mutual recognition.
PwC highlights the idea of a unified approach proposed through state coordination (including a reciprocal-style licensing concept) to reduce operational bottlenecks. 2) A national committee that doesn’t override states Cove explicitly floats a national committee of regulation or “local committees that sing from the same hymn.” This can work if it functions like a standards body and coordination hub rather than a license-issuing federal super-regulator. 3) A narrower “remote gaming” federal framework (highest litigation risk) Some legal commentary around the Central Gaming Bill noted that lawmakers argued the Supreme Court ruling didn’t explicitly settle online/remote gaming, and the bill attempted to create a comprehensive remote gaming framework, including technology certification and payment method controls. The problem is obvious: if that framework effectively reintroduces federal licensing dominance, it invites fresh constitutional fights and prolongs uncertainty—the opposite of what investors want.
Conclusion
Ben Cove’s optimism about 2026 is credible—not because Nigeria suddenly becomes simple, but because the market has reached the point where coordination becomes economically inevitable. Tinubu’s refusal to sign the Central Gaming Bill effectively locks in the constitutional direction (states lead). Now the only “adult” move left is to build a cooperative system that standardizes compliance, protects players, and still keeps the licensed sector competitive against offshore pressure. If Nigeria gets that balance right, 2026 won’t just “resolve a standoff”—it will convert legal clarity into regulatory usability. And that, more than any headline bill, is what turns investor interest into actual capital. Tags: Nigeria, Africa iGaming, regulation, compliance, lotteries, sports betting, state licensing, legal risk, market maturity, offshore risk
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The post Nigeria’s Gambling Standoff: 2026 Could Finally Deliver a “Playable” Rulebook appeared first on Gamingo News.
Nigeria’s gambling market is too big to ignore—and right now, it’s stuck in a regulatory tug-of-war that nobody can afford to “win” the wrong way. After Nigeria’s Supreme Court knocked out the National Lottery Act in late 2024, the industry expected a clean pivot to state-led regulation. Instead, lawmakers pushed the Central Gaming Bill to The post Nigeria’s Gambling Standoff: 2026 Could Finally Deliver a “Playable” Rulebook appeared first on Gamingo News.
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