National Sports Governance Bill 2025 and the Online Gaming Bill 2025
The Indian Parliament has passed two important bills in August 2025 that will change how sports and online gaming work in the country. First, the National Sports Governance Bill 2025 and the Online Gaming Bill 2025 are now law after getting approval from both houses of Parliament.
National Sports Governance Bill 2025
The National Sports Governance Bill 2025 creates a new framework to manage and oversee sports in India. It has four main parts: governance structure, member rules, dispute resolution, and athlete protection.
1. Governance Structure
A National Sports Board (NSB) becomes the top authority. Its key roles are:
- Granting and withdrawing official recognition of sports federations
- Setting standards for elections, finance, and operations
- Monitoring compliance and auditing federations
The NSB will include government nominees, athlete representatives, experts in sports science, and members from state governments.
2. Rules for Sports Federations
Each national sports body must follow tight rules:
- Diversity: At least four women on the executive committee
- Athlete Voice: Two former athletes on every leadership team
- Age Limit: Office holders cannot exceed 70 years (extendable to 75 by special permission)
- Term Limits: Maximum of three consecutive terms for president, secretary, and treasurer, followed by one-term break
Federations that break these rules can lose funding, recognition, and the right to send teams to international events.
3. Dispute Resolution
The bill sets up a National Sports Tribunal with powers of a civil court. It handles:
- Election disputes
- Selection grievances
- Financial and governance complaints
Decisions by this tribunal are final, with appeals allowed only to the Supreme Court. This replaces lengthy legal battles in multiple courts.
4. Athlete Protection and Transparency
A new Safe Sports Policy requires federations to:
- Implement grievance redressal systems
- Appoint ombudsmen for harassment and abuse complaints
- Offer support services for mental and physical health
Additionally, all bodies receiving public funds fall under the Right to Information Act, ensuring transparency in spending and operations. The only exception is the BCCI, which remains exempt unless it takes government money.
The Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025 passed by the Parliament.
The Bill takes a balanced approach – promoting what’s good, prohibiting what’s harmful for middle-class and youth.
Here’s a quick explainer 👇🧵 pic.twitter.com/q4Pthsrb2V
— Ashwini Vaishnaw (@AshwiniVaishnaw) August 21, 2025
Online Gaming Bill 2025
The Online Gaming Bill 2025 imposes strict rules on online games where real money is at stake. It focuses on banning money games, setting heavy penalties, and promoting safe digital play.
1. Complete Ban on Money-Based Games
Any game that involves a stake or fee with a chance of monetary return is banned. This includes:
- Fantasy sports (cricket, football, etc.)
- Poker, rummy, and card games
- Online lotteries and betting apps
Players and operators cannot legally offer or participate in these games.
2. Penalties and Enforcement
Violations carry severe punishments:
- Fines: Up to ₹2 crore
- Imprisonment: Up to 5 years
- Cognizable, non-bailable offenses: Police can arrest without warrant
Specific penalties:
- Running illegal gaming services: 3 years jail or ₹1 crore fine
- Advertising banned games: 2 years jail or ₹50 lakh fine
- Facilitating money transfers: 3 years jail or ₹1 crore fine
- Repeat offenses: Harsher sentences and higher fines
Authorities have powers for:
- Warrantless searches and seizures
- Freezing bank accounts and digital wallets
- Blocking websites and apps under IT Act Section 69A
3. Financial Restrictions
The bill bars banks, payment gateways, and digital wallets from processing transactions for banned games. As a result:
- Players cannot add funds to gaming accounts
- Operators cannot receive payments
- Credit and debit card transactions are blocked
This financial firewall effectively shuts down the money flow.
4. Company and Director Liability
Corporate leaders share full legal responsibility. If a company breaks the law:
- Directors, managers, and officers face the same punishments
- Only independent directors unaware of violations are protected
This ensures accountability at every level of management.
5. Promoting Safe and Skill-Based Gaming
While banning money games, the bill also supports:
- E-sports: Official recognition, guidelines, and funding for tournaments
- Educational and social games: Programs for digital literacy, skill-building, and cultural content
- An Online Gaming Authority to classify games, handle complaints, and issue “safe game” certifications
Impact and Outcomes
- Sports Administration: The sports bill introduces clear rules, term limits, and an independent tribunal. This reduces conflicts and promotes fair play.
- Gaming Industry: The online gaming bill halts money-based platforms worth billions, but it creates space for e-sports and non-monetary digital games.
- Public Safety: Both bills aim to protect athletes and gamers—preventing abuse, harassment, addiction, and financial harm.
- Legal Clarity: A unified sports tribunal and defined gaming offenses speed up dispute resolution and enforcement.
Together, these laws mark a major shift in India’s sports governance and digital gaming landscape, balancing growth, safety, and accountability.



