Quick Overview
Contents
- Executive Director Tim Miller clarified that players won’t be asked to provide bank statements or sensitive financial paperwork during risk assessments
- Pilot programme data revealed 97% of players experienced seamless checks without any interference to their gambling activities
- Just 0.1% of live accounts required extra assistance during the assessment process, significantly lower than the initial 0.6% projection
- Between 2025 and 2026, the regulator sent 741 cease-and-desist orders and reported approximately 398,000 illegal URLs to major search engines
- No final approval has been granted for widespread implementation, with regulators waiting for additional government backing
The UK Gambling Commission has addressed mounting concerns surrounding its financial risk assessment initiative. Tim Miller, the organization’s Executive Director, clarified that players will not be compelled to provide bank statements or sensitive financial records.
Miller delivered these remarks at the keynote speech at the Ethical Gambling Forum in London this past Tuesday. His statements came after sustained criticism from lawmakers and gaming sector representatives who characterized the measures as overly intrusive.
The financial risk evaluation framework was initially introduced in the 2023 Gambling Act Review white paper. Since then, it has remained a contentious issue between regulatory authorities and significant portions of the gambling sector.
According to Miller, the assessments currently under trial “will not even attempt to make an assessment of what each customer can afford to gamble.” He characterized any demands for supplementary financial documentation following a check as lacking any “legitimate regulatory purpose.”
Trial Programme Demonstrates Limited Impact
The trial phase began in August 2024, with assessments activated when a participant’s net monthly deposits reached £500. A subsequent phase launched in February 2025 reduced that trigger point to £150.
Findings demonstrated that 97% of active participants would complete the procedure without experiencing any obstacles. This outcome exceeded the initial white paper projection, which anticipated approximately 80% would have an uninterrupted experience.
Merely 0.1% of active accounts—approximately one in every thousand—required additional assistance to finish the evaluation. The white paper had originally projected this figure would be around 0.6%.
Miller highlighted that the trial cohort exhibited elevated indicators of financial vulnerability. Those identified were two to five times more likely compared to typical participants to have defaulted on financial obligations or participated in debt management programmes within the previous year.
Fewer than 3% of active participants would activate any form of intervention measure under the proposed framework.
The Betting and Gaming Council has emerged as a prominent opponent. Chief Executive Grainne Hurst previously stated that compelling bettors to submit bank statements “isn’t frictionless, it’s intrusive and will drive customers to the illegal market.”
A YouGov poll commissioned by the BGC revealed 65% of UK gamblers would decline to supply personal financial records if mandated to continue placing wagers.
Sector opponents have also characterized the programme as a rebranding of the controversial affordability assessments. The Commission has rejected this characterization, maintaining the evaluations are not designed as expenditure caps.
Regulator Intensifies Campaign Against Unlicensed Operations
Miller also disclosed information regarding the Commission’s enforcement activities targeting unauthorized gambling platforms. From 2025 through 2026, the regulatory body dispatched 741 cease-and-desist orders.
The organization reported nearly 398,000 unauthorized URLs to search engines, resulting in approximately 267,000 removals. The Commission additionally submitted 1,068 websites for delisting and disrupted 1,134 sites through takedown actions or geographic restrictions.
The Treasury has allocated £26 million across three years to fund these initiatives. A government-supported illegal gambling task force is also participating.
Miller indicated his department is currently developing a national risk evaluation of the unlicensed market. The objective is to ensure enforcement resources target the most significant threats.
The Commission’s board has not reached a final determination regarding widespread deployment of the financial risk assessments. Miller stated any resolution would be data-driven and contingent upon sustained government support.
If authorized, a collaborative implementation team would be established with the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, operators, and credit reference organizations to coordinate the deployment.
A summer 2026 consultation response is anticipated regarding gaming machine compliance, with operators mandated to eliminate non-compliant machines by 29 July 2026.
