Gambling Commission Announces New Rules Empowering Consumers and Boosting Operator Transparency

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Alan Evans

Updated by Alan Evans

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Last Updated 4th Feb 2025, 05:32 PM

Gambling Commission Announces New Rules Empowering Consumers and Boosting Operator Transparency

The UK Gambling Commission introduces stricter deposit limits and transparency measures for online operators. (Image: Olga Yastremska / Alamy)

The Gambling Commission has today announced changes aimed at increasing consumer control over online casino deposit limits and greater transparency of customer funds protection by operators. 

A further change to the Commission’s Licence Conditions and Codes of Practice (LCCP) will also pave the way for the implementation of the Government’s upcoming statutory levy. 

New Customer-Led Tools

New rules will give consumers more effective ways to manage their gambling by making it easier to set and maintain deposit limits on their online accounts in ways that work best for them.  

From Oct. 31st 2025, all gambling businesses must prompt their customers to set a financial limit before they make their first deposit and make it easy to review and alter this limit at any point after. 

Gambling businesses will also be required to remind consumers every six months to review their account and transaction information—this will help customers consider if they want to change existing or set new deposit limits. 

Work by the Gambling Commission revealed recent changes by some operators on how deposit limits are offered, which could cause confusion for consumers. 

As a result, the Gambling Commission will launch a short supplementary consultation on proposals to improve consistency and transparency for consumers. 

Transparency of Protection of Customer Funds

Operators who hold customer funds must already set out in the terms and conditions whether these are protected in the event of insolvency, the level of such protection and the method by which this is achieved. They must also make this information available at the point at which a customer first deposits money. 

The level of protection must be described as either ‘not protected—no segregation,’ ‘not protected—segregation of customer funds,’ ‘medium protection’ or ‘high protection.’  

From Oct. 31st 2025, operators whose customer funds are ‘not protected’ in the event of insolvency must actively remind consumers once every six months that their funds are not protected. 

Whilst there is no legal duty on gambling operators to protect customers funds in the event of insolvency, many of them do so voluntarily. The changes will help consumers understand which operators protect their funds and which do not—information that will support them in making choices about who they gamble with. 

Changes Connected With the New Statutory Levy

The Commission’s LCCP currently requires operators to make annual financial contributions to a list of research, prevention and treatment organisations.

This requirement will be removed close to the introduction of the government’s statutory levy, expected to come into force on 6 April 2025, as it will become obsolete.

Tim Miller, Commission Executive Director for research and policy, said, “These changes illustrate our commitment to ensuring gambling is fair and open by improving consumer empowerment and choice.  

“These changes will help consumers decide on deposit limits, enable them to keep track of their spending and ensure they are fully aware of what happens to their funds should an operator become insolvent.

“We will now continue our work to deliver our remaining White Paper commitments, including our programme of evaluation.” 

Meet The Author

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Alan Evans
Alan Evans
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Most of my career was spent in teaching including at one of the UK’s top private schools. I left London in 2000 and set up home in Wales raising four beautiful children. I enrolled at University where I studied Photography and film and gained a Degree and subsequently a Masters Degree. In 2014 I helped launch a new local newspaper and managed to get front and back page as well as 6 filler pages on a weekly basis. I saw that journalism was changing and was a pioneer of hyperlocal news in Wales. In 2017 I started one of the first 24/7 free independent news sites for Wales. Having taken that to a successful business model I was keen for a new challenge. Joining the company is exciting for me especially as it is a new role in Europe. I am keen to establish myself and help others to do the same.

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