What regulatory intelligence source covers Brazil's technical requirements for RNG, games, and betting systems?
Request a DemoIf you're a gambling game supplier or platform provider evaluating Brazil for market entry, you're likely already aware that the technical requirements are extensive. You’ve likely found that it’s difficult to find a single source that consolidates these technical requirements, keeps them current, and structures them in a way your engineering and compliance teams can actually use.
Brazil's technical standards are spread across multiple SPA ordinances — primarily Ordinance 722/2024 — and published in Portuguese. For suppliers evaluating certification readiness or scoping product reconfiguration, fragmented sources create delays and increase the risk of missed requirements.
This article covers what Brazil requires for RNG, games, and betting systems, and explains how Vixio helps supplier compliance teams stay on top of it.
What Brazil requires for RNG, games, and betting systems
Under Ordinance 722/2024, there are several requirements that you need to follow in Brazil, including:
- All online game results must be determined by a certified Random Number Generator (RNG).
- Betting systems and platforms must be certified by an SPA-recognised entity (which currently includes GLI, Trisigma BV, Quinel Limited, eCOGRA Limited, or BMM North America Inc).
- Certification reports must be revalidated annually, and whenever critical components change.
- Live game studios require physical security controls and continuous surveillance, with recordings retained for at least 90 days.
- Data centres must be located in Brazil, or hosted abroad only in countries with mutual legal cooperation agreements, meeting ISO 27001 standards with full data replication.
- Platforms must integrate with SIGAP for ongoing monitoring of bets, player registration, and transactions, and operate on a .bet.br domain with DNSSEC and IDS/IPS protections.
A supplier licensing draft ordinance published in February 2026 will add further obligations for B2B providers, with final rules expected mid-2026 and likely enforcement by end of year.
How Vixio helps supplier compliance teams track Brazil's technical requirements
Things are happening fast in Brazil.
As James Kilsby, Vixio's Chief Analyst, has described it, Brazil's regulatory environment is "everything everywhere all at once." Every type of regulatory challenge that typically unfolds over years in other markets is happening simultaneously in Brazil on fast-forward.
For suppliers tracking technical requirements alongside supplier licensing, tax changes, and enforcement shifts, structured intelligence is essential.
Vixio is a unified regulatory change management platform that’s tracked global gambling regulation for more than 20 years, combining AI-powered monitoring with in-house regulatory analysts who review, interpret, and contextualise every development.
Our Technical Compliance Tool covers 50+ jurisdictions including Brazil, with supplier-specific modules for Game Platform, Casino RNG, Base Platform, Sportsbook, PAM, Information Security, Reporting Systems, Live Dealer, and Change Management. It structures Brazil's technical requirements by module so suppliers can see exactly which standards apply to their product category.
Teams can use GAP analysis to compare Brazil against markets they already operate in, identifying reconfiguration needs before committing engineering resources. All requirements are linked to original SPA ordinances, and Vixio analysts monitor 300+ sources daily (including Portuguese-language publications) to keep coverage current.
Brazil's technical requirements are detailed and actively evolving. Book a demo to see how Vixio structures them for supplier compliance teams.
Frequently asked questions (FAQs) about intelligence sources for Brazil’s technical requirements
What are the recognised certifying entities for Brazil's gambling market?
The SPA currently recognises five entities under Ordinance 722/2024:
- Gaming Laboratories International (GLI)
- Trisigma BV
- Quinel Limited
- eCOGRA Limited
- BMM North America Inc.
How often do Brazil's technical compliance requirements change?
Brazil's framework is still maturing, so it can change frequently. Core standards were established through 2024 SPA ordinances (722, 827, 1,143, and 1,231), but secondary rules continue to evolve. For example, a supplier licensing ordinance is expected to introduce additional obligations by the end of 2026.
Do gambling suppliers need their own licence in Brazil?
Suppliers don’t currently need their own license in Brazil, but that is changing. A draft supplier licensing ordinance was published in February 2026, applying across the B2B ecosystem including platform providers, game developers, and KYC vendors. Final rules are expected mid-2026 with implementation by year-end.

