RaffleLinkHelp Centre

Tasmania

Raffle rules for Tasmania — and the online-only exemption that simplifies things.

Last reviewed 5 June 2026

Tasmania has a helpful simplification for online raffles, which makes it one of the easier places to include.

The online-only exemption

If your raffle is online-only — no physical paper tickets sold in person in Tasmania — it's exempt from Tasmania's raffle regulations. In practice, that means an online raffle run through RaffleLink can include Tasmanian buyers without a Tasmanian permit.

The catch: mixing in-person and online

The exemption is for online-only raffles. If you also sell paper tickets in person in Tasmania, those in-person sales must follow Tasmania's raffle rules. So the clean path for an online platform like RaffleLink is to keep Tasmanian sales online.

If you're selling in person in Tasmania

If your fundraising involves selling physical tickets at a Tasmanian event, the online exemption doesn't cover that side. You'd need to follow Tasmania's standard raffle rules for the paper tickets — check with the Tasmanian regulator for what applies, and reach out to support@rafflelink.com if you're running a mixed in-person and online raffle so we can help you set it up correctly.

For an online raffle, RaffleLink treats Tasmanian buyers under the online-only exemption. If your plans include in-person sales in Tasmania, that's the point to talk to us and the regulator.

The official source

Raffles in Tasmania fall under the Tasmanian Liquor and Gaming Commission (Department of Treasury and Finance). Verify the current position with them, especially if any part of your raffle is sold in person.

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