Britain’s gambling watchdog is pouring an extra £26 million into a problem it admits is becoming harder to control: unlicensed online operators that disappear, reappear, and continue targeting UK players from beyond the regulator’s reach.

The new funding package, outlined by the UK Gambling Commission, will be used to expand enforcement teams, strengthen detection technology, and increase pressure on offshore gambling websites serving British consumers without a licence. At the heart of the plan is a larger illegal markets unit. The Commission has already directed part of the funding toward recruiting specialist staff capable of tracking rogue operators and coordinating enforcement actions.
The move reflects a growing reality for regulators worldwide: shutting down illegal gambling sites increasingly requires technical expertise that is often in short supply. The challenge is not simply finding these operators; it is keeping them offline. Illegal gambling websites rarely disappear for long.
Once blocked or removed, many quickly return under new domain names, forcing regulators into a cycle of repeated disruption rather than permanent removal. The Commission plans to invest heavily in technology designed to identify unlicensed platforms more quickly and monitor how they shift across the internet.
Increased Scrutiny on Big Tech Platforms and Cryptocurrency
Officials believe better detection tools are essential as operators become more sophisticated in hiding their activities and avoiding enforcement. Cross-border investigations remain one of the biggest obstacles, as many sites attracting UK customers are based overseas. New legal powers could strengthen the Commission’s position through court-backed domain blocking measures executed by internet service providers.
The crackdown is also turning pressure toward major technology platforms. The Commission has openly questioned why major tech environments continue to allow advertising from unlicensed gambling brands to reach UK users across social media, search engines, and messaging channels.
Particular attention has been drawn to reports that gambling advertisements from non-GamStop operators continue reaching people who have signed up to self-exclusion programs. Regulators argue that large technology companies possess the technical capability to block such promotions more effectively.
The regulator also identified cryptocurrency as a recurring feature within the illegal gambling market, as online searches connected to crypto frequently lead consumers toward unlicensed platforms. For now, no framework exists that would allow widespread crypto adoption by licensed UK operators, keeping digital assets a primary focus of ongoing enforcement discussions.

