University of Cambridge Study Reveals Stark Gender Disparity in Meta Gambling Ads in Ireland

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on April 30, 2026
Editorial Standards

☆ Editorial Standards

All news content is produced by qualified journalists and analysts under a published editorial code requiring accuracy, source verification, and editorial review prior to publication.

Advertisers and commercial partners have no influence over news coverage.


News editorial policy · Contact us
✓ Fact-Checked

✓ Fact-Checked

Every article undergoes senior editorial review.

Regulatory and legal reporting is cross-referenced against primary sources including official government and regulatory authority records.

Corrections are issued transparently with a visible update notice.


News fact-check policy
⊘ Independence

⊘ Independence

Gamblers Connect is a B2B iGaming media platform.

Editorial decisions, including what to cover, how to cover it, and what to publish, are made independently by our newsroom.

Commercial partners may purchase publication frequency but cannot influence editorial tone, angle, or content.


News independence policy
↗ Commercial Disclosure

↗ Commercial Disclosure

Gamblers Connect is a B2B media platform. We generate revenue through subscriptions, B2B referral partnerships, directory listings, advertising, and media services.

Gamblers Connect is not a licensed gambling operator, affiliate, or player acquisition channel in any jurisdiction.

We do not earn revenue from player activity, wagers, or deposits.


News commercial disclosure · Contact us
A landmark analysis led by the University of Cambridge has uncovered a significant gender imbalance in how gambling advertisements are delivered on Meta platforms in Ireland.

A landmark analysis led by the University of Cambridge has uncovered a significant gender imbalance in how gambling advertisements are delivered on Meta platforms in Ireland.

The research, which analyzed 411 unique advertisements from 88 licensed operators between March 2024 and February 2025, found that male accounts were reached more than twice as often as female accounts.

Data and Demographics

Leveraging data made transparent by the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), researchers found that the ads reached 12,690,245 male accounts compared to just 5,458,438 female accounts, a ratio of 2.3:1. The study also highlighted a heavy concentration on young adults, with the 25–44 age bracket accounting for nearly 60% of the total reached audience.

One of the most striking findings was the reach of a single Betfair advertisement, which was seen by over 1.3 million unique accounts, representing roughly 26% of Ireland’s entire population. While only 22% of ads explicitly targeted men, Meta’s internal algorithms skewed the delivery strongly toward male users, likely due to the prevalence of sports and football themes.

Expert Warnings on Vulnerability

Dr. Elena Petrovskaya, lead author of the report, expressed concern over the “dizzying” reach of these digital campaigns:

“But even when adverts were set to reach all genders, they still reached that very vulnerable group of young men. It shows that if companies just put ads on social media, they are still reaching young men – the group we know from other research is most at risk of gambling harms.”

The data serves as a baseline for assessing the impact of Ireland’s Gambling Regulation Act 2024, which took effect in March 2025. This new law introduced a 5:30 AM to 9:00 PM broadcast watershed and restricted social media ads to users who already follow licensed operators, a move designed to mitigate the normalization of betting behaviors among at-risk demographics.

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

Sources
Source documentation not yet available for this article
Our editorial team is in the process of verifying and documenting sources for this content.
Mentioned in this Article