The inaugural iGaming AFRIKA Summit opened in Nairobi on Monday, bringing together regulators, operators, investors and technology firms to discuss the future of Africa’s fast-growing gaming industry.
Held at the Sarit Expo Centre, the three-day event runs from May 4–6 and is focused on opportunities, regulation and taxation in a sector seeing rapid expansion across the continent.
Jeremiah Maangi, chief executive of iGaming AFRIKA, said Africa’s gaming market had evolved into a key growth sector driven by rising mobile penetration, a young population and increasing consumer spending.
“Africa’s gaming industry is no longer a frontier market; it is a growth market,” Maangi said, adding that the summit aims to promote structured and inclusive development.
Kenya’s regulator struck a similar tone, positioning policy as central to industry expansion. Peter Karimi, director general of the Gambling Regulatory Authority, said effective regulation was essential to ensure sustainability and investor confidence.
“Effective regulation is not the enemy of growth. It is the foundation upon which sustainable growth is built,” Karimi said, pointing to reforms aimed at strengthening licensing, tackling illegal operators and enhancing consumer protection.
Karimi also highlighted ongoing changes under Kenya’s new regulatory framework, noting that updated laws would prioritise player safety while adapting to rapid technological shifts.
Joseph Kirui Limo, chairperson of the Gambling Regulatory Authority, warned that poorly designed tax regimes could undermine the sector’s potential.
“When tax structures are punitive or unpredictable, they drive operators underground and deprive governments of revenue,” Limo said, calling for competitive and transparent taxation frameworks across African markets.
Data from the Kenya Revenue Authority shows the government collected about $240 million from betting and gaming in the 2024/25 financial year, reflecting the sector’s growing economic significance.
Panel discussions at the summit highlighted regulatory fragmentation across Africa as a key challenge. Denis Mudene Ngabirano, head of Uganda’s National Lotteries and Gaming Regulatory Board, said countries with clear regulatory and tax policies were more likely to attract investment.
Speakers also called for greater harmonisation of licensing and tax reporting standards across the continent to reduce compliance costs and support cross-border operations.
The summit comes as African governments seek to balance revenue generation with consumer protection in a sector increasingly shaped by digital platforms and mobile technology.
Promote your product, event, press release, or launch a report to a highly engaged tech and business audience. You can also take over our homepage for premium visibility and sponsor our monthly #TechNight events and podcasts and annual StartupEast Conference & Awards to maximize brand exposure.
Beyond reach and visibility, we have over ten years of experience in SEO-driven digital publishing and we are the best in the SEO market at helping brands grow organic visibility through high-quality editorial backlinks and strategic content placement. We are here to help you improve your search rankings and long-term discoverability. We also help improve AI discoverability, ensuring your brand is more visible across emerging AI-powered search and recommendation systems.
Your campaign will also be extended across TechMoran, BusinessTech.co.ke, and AfricanWomenNetwork.net, including their newsletters, giving you wider reach and engagement across East Africa’s leading digital audiences. Be part of the region’s biggest tech and business platforms monthly, quarterly, and annually.
Contact Sales
