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Betting and Gaming Council

BGC Calls for Urgent Reform as Business Rates Accelerate High Street Losses

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The Betting and Gaming Council (BGC) has issued a warning that the Government’s “unfair” business rates are fueling a high street exodus. According to the industry body, these rising costs are forcing betting shops and other businesses to close, ultimately threatening local employment, stifling investment and draining vital tax revenue from local councils.

The Growing Call for Business Rate Reform

This warning arrives as the debate over the future of Britain’s high streets intensifies. Ministers recently signaled a U-turn on planned business rates hikes for pubs—a move that recognised the extreme pressures facing “bricks-and-mortar” businesses. However, the BGC argues that this “common-sense approach” must be extended to the entire high street.

BGC CEO Grainne Hurst said: “Britain’s high streets are already under intense pressure, and an outdated and unfair business rates system is only accelerating their decline. Betting shops are closing not because communities don’t value them, but because the costs of running physical premises continue to rise.

“Ministers were right to recognise these pressures when it comes to pubs, and the same common-sense approach must now be applied across the high street. Without urgent reform, we risk losing thousands more local jobs, investment and vital footfall, while handing a growing advantage to the harmful gambling black market.”

Betting Shop Closures: By the Numbers

Official figures highlight the severity of the decline in the retail betting sector:

• 30% Decrease: The number of betting shops has fallen by nearly a third since 2019.

• Store Count: Locations dropped from 8304 in 2019 to 5825 in March 2025.

• Job Losses: This contraction has already resulted in over 10,000 job losses.

While betting shops did not face a direct tax increase in recent budgets, many operators manage both online and retail estates from a single balance sheet. Higher online gambling taxes inevitably impact the viability of physical shops, affecting staffing levels and long-term investment.

The Economic Impact on Local Communities

Despite the closures, the sector remains a pillar of the local economy. Currently, licensed betting shops:

• Support approximately 42,000 jobs.

• Contribute nearly £1 billion annually in direct tax.

• Generate £60 million per year in business rates for local authorities.

Furthermore, research by ESA Retail found that 89% of betting shop customers visit other nearby businesses during their trip, driving the “secondary spend” that keeps town centers alive.

The Risk of the Gambling Black Market

Beyond economics, the BGC warns of a social risk. Licensed shops are tightly regulated with strict age verification and safer gambling tools. Problem gambling rates in the UK remain low, at approximately 0.4% of the adult population, according to NHS surveys.

However, pushing customers away from regulated high street shops risks driving them towards the harmful illegal black market. These unlicensed operators offer no consumer protections, contribute nothing to the Treasury and provide no funding for problem gambling treatment or British sport.

The post BGC Calls for Urgent Reform as Business Rates Accelerate High Street Losses appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.

Betting and Gaming Council

BGC: Government Tax Hike Boost for Black Market

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The Betting and Gaming Council (BGC) has warned that the incoming British tax hikes will boost black market activity.

Based on a new polling by Anacta reported in February 2026, there are concerns that proposed UK government gambling strategies, particularly regarding increased taxes, could contradict their intended harm-reduction goals.

While ministers have launched a consultation to ban unlicensed operators from sponsoring football clubs, including in the Premier League, ordinary punters fear the Government’s new tax rises could drive millions straight into illegal gambling sites, the new poll reveals.

The poll, conducted found:

• 52% of people who bet believe higher taxes will make punters more likely to use unlicensed black market sites.

• 66% of those who bet say tax increases will make betting and gaming less enjoyable.

• 57% think UK gambling is already heavily regulated.

With around 22.5 million adults placing a bet each month, the Government’s disastrous tax hikes will drive millions more to the harmful black market.

Grainne Hurst, Chief Executive of the Betting and Gaming Council, said: “When you tax responsible, regulated betting and gaming companies harder, you do not reduce demand you simply drive customers towards the unsafe, unregulated black market.

“Illegal gambling sites do not pay tax. They do not contribute to British sport. They do not invest in safer gambling and they do not protect vulnerable people.

“If the Government wants growth and genuine consumer protection, it must back the regulated sector not make it less competitive against criminals.”

The regulated sector supports 109,000 jobs, contributes £6.8 billion to the economy and generates £4 billion in tax revenue, funding everything from the NHS to schools and local communities.

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Alvarez & Marsal

BGC: Licensed Gambling Advertising Continues to Decline in the UK

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Gambling advertising spend by licensed operators in the UK is continuing to decline, according to new independent analysis commissioned by the Betting and Gaming Council (BGC). The findings come as the industry warns that unregulated online advertising by illegal operators is becoming the real risk to consumers.

The research, conducted by Alvarez & Marsal (A&M), set out in the Gambling Advertising and Sponsorship Report 2025, shows that gambling advertising accounted for 2.7% of total UK advertising spend in 2024, down from 3% the previous year.

The report also found that overall gambling advertising spend by licensed operators has been declining steadily since 2021, falling by 1.7% year-on-year, driven largely by a £30 million reduction in television advertising.

At the same time, a substantial share of advertising is dedicated to player protection. Around 20% of all gambling advertising is now focused on safer gambling messaging, reinforcing awareness of tools and support.

This focus is delivering tangible results. During the most recent Safer Gambling Week, engagement increased significantly, with 14% more people setting deposit limits and 22% more safer gambling tools in place.

Advertising compliance remains extremely high, with Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) rulings relating to fewer than 0.02% of gambling adverts, highlighting the strength of the UK’s regulatory framework.

Regulated gambling advertising supports 9900 jobs across the advertising, media and creative supply chain, contributes c.£500 million in Gross Value Added (GVA), and underpins 1400 full-time marketing roles. It also plays an important role in supporting free-to-air sport, lower-league and grassroots sport, as well as wider media revenues outside subscription-based models.

Grainne Hurst, CEO of the Betting and Gaming Council, said: “This independent analysis shows that gambling advertising by licensed operators is continuing to fall, with spend increasingly concentrated on safer gambling messaging and consumer protections. Our members operate within some of the strictest advertising rules of any industry and continue to raise standards across the sector.

“By contrast, illegal operators are advertising aggressively online with no safeguards, no age checks and no consumer protections, posing a huge risk to consumers. Any serious approach to advertising must be led by evidence and focused on tackling the harmful black market.”

Adam Rivers, Managing Director at Alvarez & Marsal, added: “We are pleased to have worked with the BGC on this report, which offers an insight into the state of the gambling advertising and sponsorship sector in the UK, based on actual advertising expenditure data from licensed operators.”

The report also highlights the growing scale of illegal gambling advertising. Illegal operators are increasingly using unregulated digital channels, including influencers, search engines and AI-generated content, to target consumers. Many explicitly advertise that they are “not on GAMSTOP”, while others impersonate trusted charities and institutions to deceive the public.

While licensed advertising continues to decline, separate industry analysis estimates that black market sites are spending between £500 million and £700 million on advertising their illegal sites.

The post BGC: Licensed Gambling Advertising Continues to Decline in the UK appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.

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Agrupación de Plataformas de Apuesta en Línea

BGC Enters Cooperation Agreement with Chile’s Online Operators’ Group

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The Betting and Gaming Council (BGC) has signed a Cooperation Agreement with Chile’s Agrupación de Plataformas de Apuesta en Línea (aPAL), as part of ongoing efforts to support the development of a sustainable and well-regulated online gambling market in Chile.

The agreement brings together the BGC, which represents around 90% of the UK’s regulated betting and gaming industry, and aPAL, a group of international online betting operators that have been working since 2022, to support the introduction of modern gambling regulation in Chile.

While online gambling is currently not prohibited but also unregulated, Chile already has a land-based casino sector, horseracing and a lottery duopoly, and a draft bill to regulate online operators has been under discussion for several years. Following recent elections, a new Chilean Government is now in a position to advance with the legislation, potentially introducing a licensing regime as early as 2027.

Under the Cooperation Agreement, the two organisations will work together to share international experience and evidence, strengthen the knowledge base around gambling regulation, and engage constructively with policymakers and stakeholders on the development of a sustainable licensing framework in Chile.

Carlos Baeza, Chilean lawyer and representative of aPAL, said: “Chile has a real opportunity to introduce a modern, robust regulatory framework for online gambling that protects consumers, tackles illegal activity and delivers meaningful public benefits. At present, online gambling operates entirely outside any regulatory oversight, leaving players without safeguards and the state without visibility or control.

“By working with the BGC, we can draw on international best practice and ensure policymakers have access to high-quality evidence and experience from well-regulated markets.”

Grainne Hurst, Chief Executive of the Betting and Gaming Council, added: “The BGC is pleased to be working with aPAL at a pivotal moment for gambling reform in Chile. Well-designed regulation is essential to protect players, raise standards and drive out the harmful black market.

“The UK’s regulated market shows how robust licensing, high standards and effective oversight can support safer gambling while allowing a well-regulated industry to thrive. This agreement reflects our commitment to sharing that experience and supporting evidence-based policymaking internationally.”

The Cooperation Agreement will initially run for one year and forms part of the BGC International Committee’s ongoing programme of engagement with global partners.

The post BGC Enters Cooperation Agreement with Chile’s Online Operators’ Group appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.

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