The UK Gambling Commission has detailed how it will allocate an additional £26 million aimed at reducing illegal online gambling activity. The regulator is focusing on expanding enforcement capacity, strengthening technical detection systems, and improving its ability to disrupt unlicensed operators targeting UK consumers.
A significant portion of the funding has already been directed toward staffing increases within the Commission’s illegal markets team. The expansion is intended to improve the regulator’s ability to issue cease-and-desist notices and take coordinated action against gambling websites operating without authorisation in the UK market.
Tim Miller, Executive Director of Research and Policy at the regulator, confirmed that workforce expansion is central to the plan. He explained that enforcement activity depends heavily on specialist staff, while also noting that recruitment remains challenging due to competition with private-sector employers for technical expertise. The funding, announced as part of the UK’s Autumn Budget, also contributes to the establishment of an Illegal Gambling Taskforce, although the distribution of resources across initiatives has only recently been clarified.
Expansion of Technical Detection and Enforcement Tools
A second core area of investment involves upgrading technology used to identify and disrupt illegal gambling platforms. The regulator already operates multiple detection systems, but Miller indicated that ongoing improvement is necessary as operators become more advanced in how they conceal their activities and reappear under new domains.
He said further resources will be directed toward strengthening identification tools used to locate illegal sites more efficiently. Technology, according to Miller, remains central to enforcement strategy, particularly when dealing with offshore operators that attempt to avoid UK jurisdiction.
Cross-border enforcement continues to present structural difficulties. Miller highlighted that cooperation with international authorities is inconsistent, which often limits the effectiveness of takedown actions once illegal platforms operate outside domestic oversight. The regulator is also preparing to use new legal powers that would allow it to request court orders for domain blocking at the internet service provider level, adding another layer of enforcement capability.
Despite these measures, Miller noted that enforcement outcomes often remain temporary. Blocked websites frequently return under alternative domains, creating a recurring cycle of disruption rather than a permanent solution.
Tech Platforms and Advertising Oversight Concerns
Alongside enforcement planning, the regulator has raised concerns about the role of major digital platforms in enabling illegal gambling advertising. Miller criticised technology companies for failing to prevent unlicensed gambling promotions from reaching users, including individuals registered with self-exclusion systems such as GamStop.
He argued that platforms possess the technical tools required to filter such content more effectively but tend to intervene only after users have already been exposed to it.
“I find it almost incredible that tech billionaires competing to put a man on Mars claim they’re incapable of stopping non-GamStop ads appearing on their platforms,” Miller said.
The Commission’s concerns extend beyond social media, including search engines and digital advertising networks that continue to be used by unlicensed operators to reach UK audiences. Messaging services have also been identified as channels exploited for promotional activity linked to illegal gambling sites.
Crypto Use and Regulatory Uncertainty
The regulator also addressed the role of cryptocurrency in illegal gambling ecosystems. Miller described crypto as one of the most commonly associated factors in online searches that lead users toward unlicensed operators. He noted that its use raises broader questions about whether regulated gambling operators could eventually integrate digital assets under formal supervision.
At present, there is no established framework that allows licensed operators to adopt cryptocurrency at scale. Any future development in this area is expected to depend heavily on guidance from the Financial Conduct Authority, which would shape the UK’s wider regulatory approach to digital assets.
Discussions between the regulator and industry stakeholders have already begun, focusing on how digital payment systems might be incorporated safely within regulated gambling environments. However, Miller stressed that the Gambling Commission is not seeking to lead policy development in this area ahead of financial regulators.
He also noted that emerging technologies present both enforcement risks and potential benefits, particularly where innovation could reduce consumer exposure to unlicensed platforms. Despite longer-term considerations around technological change, the immediate priority remains enforcement, with resources directed toward disruption of illegal sites, improved detection capability, and expanded cooperation with international partners.
Source:
Gambling Commission Sets £26m Strategy to Disrupt Illegal Operators, news.worldcasinodirectory.com, June 18, 2026
