UK ministers want to make sure fans betting on matchday are using regulated sites, not mystery operators hiding behind a club badge.
What DCMS is proposing
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has opened the door to a new rule: only gambling operators licensed by the UK Gambling Commission would be allowed to sponsor British sports clubs. Under the plan, any operator without a Great Britain license would be blocked from signing sponsorship agreements across UK sport, including in the Premier League.
DCMS says the change is aimed at stopping unlicensed firms from using high-profile clubs as a shortcut to credibility, while also leveling the playing field for regulated brands that must follow tougher rules.
Why this is on the table now
The government says the illegal market is growing, helped along by tighter restrictions on licensed operators. Ministers argue that as regulated firms face stricter requirements, unlicensed operators have more room to lure players with fewer checks and fewer safeguards.
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy framed it as a consumer protection issue: fans deserve to know the betting sites marketed around their clubs are properly regulated and meet UK standards. She also warned that sponsorship visibility can nudge supporters toward sites that don’t play by the rules.
The “white list” loophole and how sponsorship exploded
The Gambling Act 2005 (implemented in 2007) made it an offense to advertise gambling in Great Britain without a UK license. Yet the law included an exemption for operators based in certain “white-listed” jurisdictions, including Gibraltar and the Isle of Man.
That carve-out helped fuel a wave of sports sponsorship tied to Asia-facing online operators, with Premier League exposure doing a lot of the heavy lifting for global marketing.
Premier League already started cutting back — but there’s still room on the kit
Premier League clubs voted in April 2023 to remove gambling sponsors from the front of matchday shirts, and the voluntary change is due to kick in at the end of the current season. The key word there is “front.” Under the league’s own deal, gambling branding can still show up elsewhere, like sleeve spots and pitch-side placements.
DCMS says that means unlicensed operators can still land a big footprint in the country’s most-watched league. The proposed rule would tighten that up by limiting sponsorship access to Gambling Commission licensees only.
Consultation timeline: Spring launch
DCMS plans to run a public consultation in the spring. That’s when the details will get tested: scope, enforcement, and how sponsorship rules would apply across different sports and deal types.
A new taskforce to chase illegal ads and payments
Alongside the sponsorship plan, the government is pushing a broader crackdown via a cross-industry taskforce. The group is expected to include social media platforms, banks, and law enforcement, with a focus on two pressure points: illegal gambling ads on social platforms and the payment routes that let unlicensed sites take deposits.
Gambling Minister Baroness Twycross said unregulated gambling can exploit vulnerable players and leave customers without basic protections. She positioned the consultation and taskforce work as proof the government is willing to step in quickly when risks show up.
What it means for the average online casino player
If you’re a casual bettor, this is really about trust signals. Sponsorships are advertising with a badge on it, and a club logo can make a dodgy site look safe. DCMS wants to strip that shortcut away, so “seen on a shirt” doesn’t become a stand-in for “properly licensed.” For players, the takeaway is simple: if a site isn’t UK-licensed, the government doesn’t want it borrowing credibility from British sport.









