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iGaming market weekly report | April 6–12, 2026

Week 15 was a European story with a policy twist. The Champions League quarter-final first legs, Aintree’s Grand National, and a strong Süper Lig weekend pulled attention toward the continent’s sports calendar — eight of the top ten gainers sit in Europe or on its periphery, and Turkey alone added 6.1 million Blask Index points. Ukraine broke the pattern: its +38.9% came from a compressed policy cycle around the military gambling ban.

The downside split cleanly into two groups. Norway and Colombia gave back the previous week’s surges — classic event hangover. Venezuela, the Dominican Republic and El Salvador drifted lower without identifiable catalysts, reading as baseline compression rather than suppression. Africa, which dominated Week 14, sat out the leaderboard entirely — the natural cadence of attention normalising after two strong weeks.

Top gainers

Ukraine +38.9% — The Ukrainian Gambling Business Association formally countered the government’s universal military gambling ban proposal on April 10, arguing for a targeted case-by-case restriction model instead of a blanket block on over a million service members. The policy fight kept PlayCity, operator compliance, and the legal-versus-illegal market (estimated at 39–53% of total national volume) in continuous discussion all week.

Ireland +33.8% — Grand National week is the single biggest betting moment of the Irish calendar alongside Cheltenham, and Irish trainers dominate Aintree — Willie Mullins won the last two editions with I Am Maximus and Nick Rockett, and Irish yards fielded most of the 2026 contenders. 

Turkey +33.3% — The Süper Lig title race entered its final stretch with Galatasaray leading, Fenerbahce and Trabzonspor chasing. Combined with Champions League quarter-final coverage, this delivered the week’s biggest absolute volume swing.

Myanmar +22.9% — No clear country-specific trigger surfaced. The gain reads as a technical bounce off a thin base rather than an event-driven move.

Lithuania +20.6% — No standalone Lithuanian policy or sports story. The move tracks with the European football cluster around the Champions League quarter-finals.

Top decliners

Norway –44.8% — Event hangover after the prior week’s +46.2% surge. 

Colombia –29.7% — Event hangover after the prior week’s +26.3% surge.

Venezuela –21.6% — No clear country-specific trigger surfaced within the reporting week. 

Dominican Republic –19.5% — Same pattern. No regulatory, sporting or political catalyst surfaced within the window. Reads as baseline compression.

El Salvador –11.7% — Again, no regulatory or sports catalyst within the window. On a small base (~175K), a move of this magnitude sits within normal week-to-week noise rather than a meaningful reversal.

Market spotlight: Ukraine | +38.9%

Ukraine added 495K Blask Index points week-over-week, crossing 1.77 million — the country’s  strongest momentum signal of 2026 so far. The driver is policy, not sport: a compressed legislative cycle around the military gambling ban.

The Ministry of Digital Transformation’s draft resolution banning all military personnel from licensed platforms closed public consultation on April 3. On April 10, the Ukrainian Gambling Business Association formally countered the universal ban with a commander-initiated case-by-case model, citing analyses that put the illegal segment at 39–53% of national volume against a 1.18 billion euro legal market across 34 licences. 

Dev.ua separately reported a record spike in gambling-related searches concentrated in regions with high military presence — the search signal itself became part of the story.

The one-to-two-month rollout timeline puts a technical decision in late May or early June. Week 16 has no offsetting sports catalyst — Ukrainian clubs are out of European knockouts, the domestic UPL is mid-table-settled. Expect partial give-back as consultation-window intensity fades, with a secondary spike when PlayCity publishes its final mechanism.

Regional snapshot

Europe 

The region carried the week. Turkey (+33.3%), Ukraine (+38.9%), Ireland (+33.8%), Lithuania (+20.6%), the UK (+18.9%), Czech Republic (+17.8%) and North Macedonia (+17.8%) all clustered on football and regulatory catalysts, with only Norway (–44.8%, the sole major European decliner) running against the tide. The Europe-heavy leaderboard is a direct function of the Champions League first legs plus the Grand National plus domestic league fixtures.

Asia-Pacific 

Mixed and muted. Myanmar (+22.9%) and Azerbaijan (+16.5%) posted technical gains with no standout trigger, while India (–11.4%) drifted lower mid-IPL — the 2026 edition runs March 28 to May 31 across 74 matches — which reads as mean-reversion from the tournament’s opening-week surge rather than softening interest. New Zealand (–10.8%) continues to drift with no fresh catalyst.

Africa 

Africa sat out the top ten this week after dominating the prior report (Mozambique, Tanzania, South Africa, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Guinea, Chad, Republic of the Congo, all on the Week 14 gainers list). The absence is itself the story: the region’s attention cycle has normalised after two consecutive weeks of strong gains, with only Malawi (–10.3%) appearing in the decliners. No suppression signal — just the natural cadence of baseline-compression following sustained attention.

Next week watchlist

Turkey — Süper Lig consolidation test

Week 16 brings Fenerbahçe–Rizespor (April 17), Trabzonspor–Başakşehir and the Istanbul derby cycle. Direction: likely consolidation above baseline, with risk of partial give-back if results don’t tighten the title race.

Spain, France, Germany, UK — Champions League QF second legs

April 14–15 closes the quarter-finals with Atlético–Barcelona, Liverpool–PSG, Arsenal–Sporting CP and Bayern–Real Madrid. Direction: continued elevation for all eight national markets, with the semi-final draw anchoring attention into late April.

Ireland, UK — post–Grand National give-back

Aintree on April 11 was the single biggest jumps-racing betting moment of the Irish calendar, and the Week 15 spike reflects that. With the main event gone and only the Irish Grand National at Fairyhouse on Easter Monday (April 21) as a secondary anchor, expect meaningful mean-reversion in both markets. Direction: likely partial give-back for UK and Ireland, with a smaller secondary bump around Easter weekend.

Methodology note

Blask Index tracks real-time iGaming player interest via AI-analyzed Google search data, updated hourly and filtered to remove low-intent noise (scams, complaints). WoW% measures momentum: positive indicates growing attention; negative indicates declining attention.