英国非法赌博市场爆炸性增长345%,犯罪网络瞄准自我排除的玩家

英国非法赌博市场爆炸性增长345%,犯罪网络瞄准自我排除的玩家

The numbers are hard to ignore. Britain’s illegal online gambling market has grown by more than threefold since 2022. Yield Sec, which monitors the sector, says unlicensed operators now account for about nine percent of the country’s online betting. That’s roughly £379 million in revenue in just the first six months of 2025.

但令人不安的是--这并不是通常所说的税收增加或过度监管导致玩家离开特许公司的故事。助长这种增长的是一些更加玩世不恭的行为。犯罪团伙正在积极追捕本应受到保护的人:50 多万已将自己列入 Gamstop(英国自我排除登记册)的赌徒。

Yield Sec’s data shows that 84 percent of illegal gambling activity in Britain is tied to so-called “not on Gamstop” promotions. These sites openly advertise themselves as alternatives for anyone locked out of legal betting platforms. For the 532,000 people who have self-excluded, that lure is direct, and brutal. Collectively, they’re now losing an estimated £426 million a year to illegal operators. On average, each self-excluded player parts with about £2,000 annually—money they specifically tried to protect themselves from losing.

The scale is staggering. While the licensed sector counts around 2,000 operators, the black market already has more than 700 unlicensed sites targeting British users. And it doesn’t stop there—behind them sits a web of more than 1,600 affiliates, paid to funnel players straight into these unregulated casinos and sportsbooks.

How do they keep the money moving when banks block transactions from self-excluded players? Cryptocurrency. It’s the obvious workaround. Bitcoin, Tether, whatever’s liquid and easy to move. For gamblers, it’s a way around blocks; for the operators, it’s near-perfect cover—anonymous, borderless, hard to seize.

The UK Gambling Commission has been trying to fight back. In 2025 alone, they’ve issued 334 cease-and-desist orders and blocked over 30,600 URLs linked to illegal gambling. Yet, as regulators themselves admit, it’s a game of whack-a-mole. Shut one down and another appears almost immediately under a fresh domain.

On September 3rd, Tim Miller, one of the commission’s executive directors, gave a speech that spelled it out: illegal operators are “systematically undermining protections.” A few weeks later, on September 18th, the commission released new consumer research confirming that self-excluded players are the ones most likely to respond to “not on GamStop” ads.

Politically, this is becoming messy. Parliament has already seen MPs reopen a stalled inquiry into gambling reform. At the same time, reports from industry outlets warn of a massive boom in illegal gambling and the risks it carries. Meanwhile, political pressure is growing for a gambling tax hike in the November budget. Operators argue that higher taxes may only worsen the competitive gap between licensed and unlicensed sites.

And that’s really the point. Britain now has a situation where nearly one in ten online bets is placed with an unlicensed operator. The growth isn’t some by-product of fiscal policy—it’s the result of criminals flipping a consumer protection system into a marketing tool. Self-exclusion was supposed to reduce harm. Currently, it’s being used to find easy prey.


参考文献

普雷斯顿·戴维斯
About the Author

普雷斯顿·戴维斯

拥有超过20年撰写赌博、游戏和技术相关内容的经验,普雷斯顿·戴维斯是该行业的资深专家。他对游戏世界的深入了解和热情使他成为读者寻求可靠见解和专家分析时值得信赖的声音。

更多来自作者

连接提示福布斯

连接提示《福布斯》:福布斯》如何成为《纽约时报》每日单词谜题的首选指南

Depomin82:你需要知道的一切

Depomin82:你需要知道的一切