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UKGC implements staged financial risk assessments for gamblers

8 July 20265 Min.by Lisa Lustich
Editorially reviewed by Lisa LustichLast review:
UKGC rollt Finanzrisikoprüfungen schrittweise aus

The UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) confirmed the phased introduction of financial risk assessments following a successful trial. Over 97% of players above the threshold were assessed frictionlessly.

The UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) has confirmed the phased introduction of financial risk assessments. These measures follow a successful pilot project. They are designed to identify customers in significant financial difficulty without affecting their credit scores. The implementation will be gradual to minimize friction.

The checks are based on the Gambling Act white paper and aim to identify at-risk players early. The UKGC relies on Credit Reference Agencies for this. It is planned that players will not have to submit documents.

Numbers and facts

The UKGC's pilot project yielded convincing results. 97 percent of players who exceeded the threshold could be assessed frictionlessly. This rate significantly exceeded the original estimate of 80 percent. This was a key reason for the decision to implement a staged rollout. The Commission also found that current gambling operator processes are not always sufficient to identify at-risk customers. Tim Miller, Executive Director of the UKGC, stated in a speech at the Ethical Gambling Forum that less than 3% of active customers would trigger intervention steps. Only about 0.1% of active accounts, or one in a thousand, would not be able to complete the assessment without additional support. This is significantly lower than the 0.6% initially estimated in the white paper.

The first stage of implementation begins with the largest operators. Financial risk assessments apply to players who deposit more than GBP 5,000 within 24 hours. For young adults under 25, the trigger will be GBP 2,500 within a rolling 24-hour period. Fewer than 0.5 percent of players are expected to fall into this initial scope. The final framework will operate on net deposit triggers rather than broad checks across the entire customer base. In the last stage, FRAs will apply to players who exceed GBP 1,000 in net deposits over 24 hours or GBP 3,000 over 90 days. For vulnerable groups, the thresholds will be GBP 750 and GBP 2,000 respectively. The UKGC states that the early stages will be more lenient towards operators while the system is refined.

Background

The UK Gambling Commission is defending its financial risk check program. It reassures the industry that high-spending gamblers will not need to submit detailed financial documents as part of the program. Players should not be forced to submit bank statements. This measure also has the support of Gambling Minister Baroness Twycross.

“The right balance must be struck so that assessments protect those in financial difficulties from the risk of gambling-related harm but do not create unnecessary burdens for the industry or consumers.” - Baroness Twycross, Gambling Minister

Sarah Gardner, the acting CEO of the UKGC, also commented on the implementation.

“We have listened to feedback throughout the pilot process, which has led to us deciding to carefully proceed. We will work with key partners to make sure that they are implemented in the most effective way for consumers and operators.” - Sarah Gardner, acting CEO of the UKGC

The government intends to consider both protection and practicality equally. This approach shifts the focus to the implementation of the checks. The Betting and Gaming Council (BGC) once criticized the plans, as a YouGov survey commissioned by the BGC showed that 65% of UK bettors would refuse to provide personal financial documents if required.

Why it matters for German players

German players are already familiar with similar measures from the State Treaty on Gambling 2021 (GlüStV 2021). Here, too, players are protected from excessive losses. Germany has established a strong supervisory authority, the Joint Gambling Authority of the Federal States (GGL). The GGL monitors compliance with the strict rules. This includes the deposit limit of 1,000 euros per month and the stake limit of 1 euro per spin on online slot machines. These limits are to be controlled via the central monitoring system LUGAS.

The British measures show a similar tendency to increase player protection. However, the approach to implementation differs significantly. In Germany, the focus is on uniform, nationwide limits across all providers. The UKGC, on the other hand, relies on individual risk assessments without direct deposit limits, but with occasion-based checks. German online casinos with a GGL license must already submit and adhere to very comprehensive player protection concepts. This also includes measures for the early detection of problematic gambling behavior.

What it means for GGL-licensed casinos

For GGL-licensed casinos, developments in the UK do not mean direct changes. The German market operates under its own rules. Nevertheless, such international developments can serve as an impulse. They could influence future adjustments to the GlüStV 2021. The GGL certainly observes such measures in other regulated markets closely. An approach like that in the UK could also be discussed in Germany in the long term. However, German players currently do not have to worry about disclosing financial documents. The German limits are flat-rate limits and are not based on individual credit checks. German regulation is already very strict and designed for prevention.

Sources & further reading

Gambling can be addictive. Please play responsibly. Help and counselling at 0800 1 372 700 (BZgA, free & anonymous).

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