Betfred operator Petfre fined £900,000 for social responsibility failures

Online gambling operator Petfre (Gibraltar) Limited has been fined £900,000 for breaching social responsibility duties. One customer lost £17,900 within 24 hours without adequate intervention.
The UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) has imposed a penalty of £900,000 on Petfre (Gibraltar) Limited – the operator of betfred.com – due to serious failings in social responsibility. A Commission investigation revealed that the company had insufficient processes to identify harmful gambling behavior early. The issues included inadequate identification of indicators such as spend, time spent gambling, and spending patterns using automated processes.
There was a lack of mechanisms for immediate, automated action to mitigate harm, even when strong signs of problematic gambling were identified. Particularly critical was a process that prevented a customer account, once flagged for review, from being reviewed again within seven days. This resulted in players exhibiting further detrimental behaviors not being addressed as promptly as they should have been. In one instance, a customer lost £17,900 within just 24 hours without an additional interaction.
Numbers and facts
Petfre (Gibraltar) Limited was thus ordered to pay £900,000. This is not the first penalty for the company. An earlier report from September 2022 by igamingbusiness.com shows that Petfre had previously received a £2.9 million fine for compliance failures in player protection and anti-money laundering. Furthermore, the operator, which runs Oddsking.com alongside Betfred, was sanctioned with £240,000 by the UKGC in October 2025. This fine was due to several online slot games not meeting Remote Technical Standards (RTS). These failures included not displaying a player's net position and celebrating losses as wins.
The UKGC has repeatedly spoken out against such practices in the past. In February 2021, features that celebrated losses as wins, along with auto-play and fast slot spin speeds of less than 2.5 seconds, were banned. Neil McArthur, the then CEO of the Gambling Commission, emphasized that such features increased the risk of harm to customers. Other companies like Maple International Ventures (Lottomart.com, £360,000 fine) and ProgressPlay (£1 million fine) also received substantial penalties for similar infringements. This demonstrates the UKGC's consistent approach to regulation.
Background
The social responsibility of gambling operators is of paramount importance in regulated markets like the United Kingdom. The UKGC places a high value on companies implementing robust systems to protect vulnerable players. The deficiencies found at Petfre highlight the critical importance of continuous monitoring and swift responses to signs of problematic gambling behavior. If a system allows a player to go unreviewed for seven days despite incurring high losses, it represents a significant protection gap. This undermines trust in the industry and endangers affected individuals. Regulatory interventions by the Commission aim to ensure that licenses are not only granted but also continuously monitored and sanctioned for non-compliance. The goal is to ensure a safe gaming environment.
What it means for GGL-licensed casinos
The Petfre case underscores the need for robust player protection mechanisms, which also apply to GGL-licensed casinos in Germany. The GGL expects its licensees to act proactively to identify and prevent harmful gambling behavior. This means that not only automated processes for identifying problems must be in place, but also trained personnel who react promptly to warning signs. Deficiencies such as those found at Petfre – for example, delays in re-evaluating accounts – would be unacceptable in Germany and would also lead to severe sanctions. The GGL will closely monitor developments in other regulated markets and, if necessary, adapt or tighten its own requirements to ensure one of the highest player protection standards worldwide.
Sources & further reading
- Joint Gambling Authority of the German Federal States (GGL): gluecksspiel-behoerde.de
- Whitelist of permitted online operators: GGL-Whitelist
- BZgA problem-gambling helpline: 0800 1 372 700 (free, anonymous, 24/7)
- Editorial methodology: Editorial guidelines Lustich.de
Gambling can be addictive. Please play responsibly. Help and counselling at 0800 1 372 700 (BZgA, free & anonymous).





