TAS · Updated June 2026
Raffle rules in Tasmania
No permit needed — online raffles are exempt in TAS.
No permit — but rules still apply
Tasmania exempts online raffles from permit requirements, which makes it one of the simplest places in Australia to fundraise with a raffle. General fairness rules still apply: tickets must be sold as described, the draw must be genuinely random, and results must be made available to entrants — all of which RaffleLink handles for you.
How RaffleLink keeps you compliant
These rules are encoded into RaffleLink itself. Before your raffle goes live, we check your prize pool, duration, draw date and ticket setup against TAS’s requirements and flag anything that needs attention — so your committee never finds out about a rule after it’s been broken.
See how it worksCommon questions
Do I need a permit to run a raffle in Tasmania?
No. Online raffles are exempt from permit requirements in Tasmania. You can launch an online raffle without a permit application.
Can we sell raffle tickets online in Tasmania?
Yes. Online raffle ticket sales are available to eligible not-for-profit fundraising in TAS, and RaffleLink applies TAS’s rules automatically before your raffle goes live.
Who can run a raffle in Tasmania?
Raffles in Australia are generally reserved for not-for-profit organisations — clubs, schools, charities and community groups — raising funds for their cause. Check your organisation’s eligibility with the regulator if you’re unsure.
This page is general guidance for community fundraising, not legal advice. Rules change — always confirm current requirements with the regulator before launching. Last reviewed June 2026.
Run a compliant raffle in TAS
Set up your raffle and let the compliance check do the worrying.
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