TLDR
- Industry analysts estimate illegal gambling during Cheltenham Festival reached £60 million across the four-day event, averaging £2 million per race
- Total betting turnover for Cheltenham approached £1 billion, contributing to Britain’s £11 billion yearly horse racing betting market
- Approximately 6% of British betting activity now occurs through unregulated, illegal channels
- Remote gaming duty rates are set to double from 21% to 40% starting April, while sports betting duty increases from 15% to 25% by 2027
- Industry leaders project affordability verification requirements could strip £250 million from horse racing revenues within five years
The Betting and Gaming Council has released figures showing approximately £60 million in illicit wagers were placed during this year’s Cheltenham Festival. The prestigious four-day racing spectacle represents one of Britain’s premier betting events annually.
Breaking down these numbers reveals roughly £2 million in illegal bets per individual race throughout the Festival. These estimates emerged as Cheltenham generated nearly £1 billion in combined betting activity.
The Festival represents a significant portion of Britain’s horse racing betting sector, which produces approximately £11 billion in yearly turnover. Each year, Cheltenham commands a substantial share of this economic activity.
Data referenced by the BGC suggests that around 6% of British betting now flows through illegal, unregulated operators. Applied to Cheltenham’s substantial turnover figures, this percentage translates to millions of pounds bypassing legitimate channels.
Britain’s licensed online betting sector processes approximately £8 billion in annual wagers. The BGC warns the divide between regulated and illicit betting activity continues to expand.
Tax Hikes Put Pressure on Licensed Operators
BGC Chief Executive Grainne Hurst stated that criminal underground networks capitalized on the Festival’s massive betting volumes. She emphasized that unlicensed betting platforms offer zero consumer protections available through legitimate operators.
Hurst identified escalating tax burdens as a primary driver forcing bettors toward unregulated alternatives. Beginning in April, remote gaming duty rates will surge from 21% to 40%.
Additional tax increases target sports betting specifically. Remote sports betting duty will escalate from 15% to 25% by 2027, compounding financial strain on legitimate gambling businesses.
Hurst contended that combining higher taxation with invasive verification processes undermines licensed operators’ competitive position. She suggested this creates opportunities for illegal operations to expand their market share.
Affordability verification measures introduced through the government’s 2023 white paper mandate gamblers submit personal financial documentation. These requirements activate before customers can place larger wagers.
Affordability Checks Draw Criticism From Racing Industry
The Jockey Club projects these verification requirements could siphon £250 million from horse racing funding across a five-year period. Substantial numbers of bettors resist providing bank statements and detailed financial records.
Industry observers argue this resistance channels customers toward underground markets, where verification requirements don’t exist. Unlicensed platforms neither request documentation nor implement spending restrictions.
The BGC has urged coordinated action from industry stakeholders and government authorities to combat criminal organizations operating illegal betting networks. The organization maintains that protecting consumers and preserving racing’s economic foundation must remain paramount.
Hurst emphasized keeping bettors engaged with regulated platforms should be the central objective. She reiterated that consumer safeguards exclusively exist within the licensed marketplace.
The initial wave of tax increases becomes effective this April, with remote gaming duty rates approaching double current levels. The sports betting duty escalation follows in 2027.
