UK Offshore Gambling Handle Projected to Hit £33 Billion by 2028, Warns H2 Gambling Capital

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on May 22, 2026
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h2 gambling capital uk black market report

A comprehensive macroeconomic data model published by specialized analytical firm H2 Gambling Capital reveals that United Kingdom players could wager as much as £33 billion annually with illegal online operators by the end of 2028.

The Scale of the Unlicensed Migration

According to H2 Capital’s three-year forecasting metrics, the projected annual spend on unlicensed digital platforms will almost double the £17 billion handle recorded across black-market networks in 2025. The consultancy clarified that if current migration trends remain unchecked, illegal websites will capture nearly one-fifth (20%) of the total UK online gambling market share across both digital casino gaming and sports betting verticals.

The explosive growth of unauthorized platforms introduces massive tax compliance friction and player safety vulnerabilities into the British ecosystem, as these cross-border platforms actively design custom capture funnels to target domestic traffic.

BGC Characterizes Forecasts as a “Wake-Up Call”

Responding immediately to the publication, the Betting and Gaming Council (BGC) voiced intense institutional alarm regarding the projected figures, urging the home government to implement aggressive blocking measures to disrupt offshore marketing pipelines.

The BGC issued a blunt warning regarding the economic and social fallout of failing to protect the regulated perimeter:

“These forecasts are a wake-up call. The black market is not a distant threat. It is growing fast, becoming more visible, and attracting billions of pounds in stakes from British customers. By 2028, almost one in five pounds staked online could be with illegal operators. These sites pay no UK tax and support no British jobs. They offer none of the protections that exist in the regulated sector.”

To highlight the economic scale of the licensed industry, the BGC noted that the regulated betting and gaming vertical currently supports 109,000 British jobs, drives a substantial £6.8 billion economic contribution, and generates £4 billion in annual tax revenues for the state treasury.

Affordability Checks Threatened to Fuel Black-Market Margins

Leveraging the H2 Capital dataset, the trade body repeated its strong opposition to the wider rollout of intrusive financial risk assessments, commonly referred to as affordability checks. The Gambling Commission is scheduled to determine later this month whether to transition these controversial measures from a pilot testing phase into an industry-wide mandate.

During the active pilot scheme, automated financial risk assessments have been triggered when a customer hits net deposits of more than £1,000 within 24 hours or £2,000 over a rolling 90-day period. This configuration follows an earlier compromise where the Commission and the BGC agreed to a higher £5,000 monthly threshold during an initial frictionless screening phase.

However, despite these formal statutory boundaries, current compliance reports reveal that numerous casual players with significantly lower deposit thresholds have still faced intrusive requests to manually prove their private financial capacity.

The BGC concluded that imposing heavy compliance friction onto licensed brands would simply hand a massive commercial advantage straight to offshore sites that feature zero user safeguards:

“The lesson for policymakers is clear. If the regulated market is made less competitive through higher taxes or intrusive checks, customers will not stop betting. They will simply move to the black market. As the Gambling Commission considers financial risk assessments, it is vital that any checks are genuinely frictionless and targeted. Any policy that unintentionally drives even more customers towards illegal operators will undermine player safety and damage the regulated sector. That is why ministers and regulators must avoid measures that hand an advantage to the black market.”

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.

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