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Is Online Lottery Legal in India? 2026 Guide

India state lottery legality map showing which states permit lotteries under the Lotteries Regulation Act 1998.

Quick answer. Only state-government lotteries in the roughly 13 states that permit them under the Lotteries Regulation Act 1998 are legal in India. Private online lottery websites, WhatsApp prize messages, and “KBC winner” calls are not authorised lotteries - they are almost always scams. This is a citizen guidance page, not an official government, regulatory, or tax page.

If you have already received a suspicious “lottery win” message, see fake lottery scam India - full reporting guide and lucky draw scam recovery guide before paying anyone anything.

The law: Lotteries Regulation Act 1998

Lotteries in India are governed by the Lotteries (Regulation) Act, 1998 - a central law that gives state governments the authority to organise, control, or ban lotteries within their territory. The Lotteries (Regulation) Rules, 2010 extended the framework to online lotteries, defining terms such as “central computer server” and “online lottery” for the first time.

Key provisions every citizen should know:

For a state-by-state map of gambling and gaming laws more broadly, see gambling laws state-by-state India.

Which states permit lotteries in 2026?

As of June 2026, approximately 13 states have historically permitted state-run lotteries. The picture is uneven - check before you buy:

States where lotteries are prohibited include Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, and Delhi, among others.

Online vs. paper distinction matters. Kerala, for example, runs an active paper lottery (official site: statelottery.kerala.gov.in) but banned online lottery sales in 2005 under Section 5 of the Act. Buying a Kerala state lottery ticket from an online reseller is therefore not lawful in Kerala.

How to verify a lottery is genuine

A lawful state lottery has these characteristics:

  1. The ticket carries the state government's name, logo, and a unique serial number printed by a government-approved security press.
  2. The draw is announced in the state Official Gazette and on the state lottery directorate's official government website (for example, the Nagaland State Lotteries directorate under finance.nagaland.gov.in; statelottery.kerala.gov.in for Kerala; the Directorate of State Lotteries under sikkim.gov.in for Sikkim).
  3. Results are published in the state Official Gazette within a defined period.
  4. You can buy tickets only from licensed agents operating in the state - not from WhatsApp contacts, unknown apps, or foreign websites.
  5. The lottery never asks winners to pay any advance fee, “GST deposit,” “courier charge,” or “verification fee” to release a prize. Winners receive a net payout after tax deduction; they pay nothing upfront.

If you did not buy a ticket, you cannot have won. Any message claiming you are a prize winner when you never entered is a scam.

Tax on lottery winnings

Winning a lawful state lottery does not mean you take home the full prize. Two layers of tax apply:

1. Income Tax TDS - Section 393(3), Income-tax Act, 2025 (formerly Section 194B)

2. GST on lottery tickets

What this means in practice: scammers frequently demand advance “TDS” or “GST” payments to “release” a prize. Real lottery operators never collect tax from winners before paying - they deduct it and pay the government themselves.

Spotting a fake online lottery

Red flags that almost always indicate a scam:

For the full scam anatomy and step-by-step recovery guide, see KBC scam explained - the mechanics are identical across lottery fraud variants.

If you have lost money to a fake lottery

  1. Call your bank's fraud helpline immediately and ask them to raise a chargeback or freeze the transaction.
  2. Call the National Cybercrime Helpline 1930 (toll-free, 24×7).
  3. File an online complaint at cybercrime.gov.in (National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal).
  4. Preserve all evidence: screenshots of messages, UPI transaction IDs, phone numbers used, and any “lottery ticket” images sent to you.
  5. You may also use the RTI Act to ask a public authority - such as a police station or the state lottery directorate - for the status of your complaint, action taken, and the name of the officer handling it. See The RTI Playbook for step-by-step RTI filing guidance.

Frequently asked questions

It depends on where you are. Nagaland's state lottery is lawful within Nagaland and in states that have not banned other states' lotteries. Many private websites selling “Nagaland lottery tickets” are unlicensed resellers. Always buy from a government-licensed agent. If your state prohibits lotteries (for example, Tamil Nadu or Uttar Pradesh), even buying a Nagaland ticket there is illegal.

Why did I receive a message saying I won Rs 25 lakh in an online lottery?

That message is a scam. No lottery chooses winners at random from mobile numbers or email addresses of people who never entered. This is a standard advance-fee fraud script. Do not reply, do not click any link, and do not pay any “processing fee.” Block the sender and report the number at sancharsaathi.gov.in.

Can a foreign lottery website legally sell tickets to Indians?

No. Indian law restricts lottery operations to state governments. Purchasing tickets from foreign websites also raises Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) compliance issues, and any “winnings” from such sources are not recognised as lawful lottery income under Indian tax law.

How much tax do I actually pay on a Rs 10 lakh lottery prize?

The organiser deducts 30% TDS plus 4% cess, so Rs 3,12,000 is deducted at source and you receive Rs 6,88,000. You must still report the full Rs 10 lakh as income. If a surcharge applies to your total income, you may owe more at the time of filing your income tax return.

Is there any way to check if a lottery company is registered?

Yes. Lawful lotteries are notified in the state Official Gazette. Ask the seller for the state government notification number authorising the draw. You can also file an RTI application to the state lottery directorate to ask whether a specific lottery is authorised - a legitimate operator will supply a government reference number without difficulty.

What happens to the person running a fake lottery?

Running an unauthorised lottery office is an offence under BNS Section 297 (Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023, in force since 1 July 2024), punishable by up to six months imprisonment and/or a fine. Where fraud is involved, charges under BNS Sections 318-319 (cheating and impersonation) and the Information Technology Act 2000 also apply, with significantly harsher penalties.