Filter Enforcement Actions

Enforcement Statistics

118 Total Actions
Showing 20 of 118 enforcement actions

Enforcement Actions List

Curley Matthew Christopher

Curley Matthew Christopher

Critical License Revocation

The Commission revoked the Personal Functional Licence of Mr. Matthew Christopher Curley following a review. The decision was based on his dismissal for gross misconduct, which was inconsistent wit...

Jungle X UK Limited

Jungle X UK Limited

Moderate Financial Penalty

Following a review, the Gambling Commission found that Jungle X UK Limited breached numerous licence conditions and social responsibility code provisions, including failures in anti-money launderin...

Moir Philip Keith Walker

Moir Philip Keith Walker

Minor Warning

Philip Walker Moir, a Personal Management Licence (PML) holder, received a warning for breaching licence conditions between May 2020 and October 2021. As Managing Director for several licensed oper...

GiveCircle Limited

GiveCircle Limited

Minor Warning

Following a licence review, GiveCircle Limited (trading as ImpulsePay Limited) was found to have breached Licence Condition 2.3.1 regarding Technical Standards. The Commission imposed a formal warn...

Hillside (UK Gaming) ENC

Hillside (UK Gaming) ENC

Significant Regulatory Settlement

Following a compliance assessment, the Gambling Commission found failings in Hillside's processes for preventing money laundering and protecting vulnerable customers between 2021 and 2022. The oper...

Hillside (UK Sports) ENC

Hillside (UK Sports) ENC

Significant Regulatory Settlement

Following a regulatory review, the Gambling Commission found failings in the operator's processes for preventing money laundering and protecting vulnerable customers between 2021 and 2022. The lice...

Dikov Valentin Bonchev

Dikov Valentin Bonchev

Minor Warning

Mr Valentin Dikov Bonchev, a Personal Management Licence (PML) holder, received a warning for breaching a general condition of his licence. While acting as Head of Compliance and MLRO for Blue Star...

Meckenzie Roy

Meckenzie Roy

Minor Warning

Mr. Meckenzie Roy, a Personal Management Licence (PML) holder and CEO for Blue Star Planet Limited, received a warning for breaching conditions attached to his personal licence. He failed to take r...

Buttigieg Paul

Buttigieg Paul

Minor Warning

Following a licence review, Mr Paul Buttigieg, a Personal Management Licence (PML) holder, was found to have breached a condition of his licence between December 2019 and October 2020. In his role ...

Hoskin Robert Grant

Hoskin Robert Grant

Minor Warning

Following a licence review, Robert Hoskin, a Personal Management Licence (PML) holder, was found to have breached conditions of his personal licence between December 2019 and October 2020. As a dir...

Reynolds Simon Ashley

Reynolds Simon Ashley

Minor Warning

Simon Reynolds, a Personal Management Licence (PML) holder and UK Director of Compliance for Ladbrokes and LC International, was issued a warning. The Commission found that between December 2019 an...

Banbury Neil Thomas

Banbury Neil Thomas

Minor Warning

Following a licence review, Neil Banbury, a Personal Management Licence (PML) holder, was issued a warning. The Commission found that while acting as General Manager for 32Red Limited and Platinum ...

Cook Timothy Simon Stuart

Cook Timothy Simon Stuart

Minor Warning

Following a review of his Personal Management Licence, Mr. Timothy Cook was found to have breached a general condition of his licence by failing to take reasonable steps to ensure compliance at 32R...

Munro Neil Alan

Munro Neil Alan

Minor Warning

Neil Alan Munro, a Personal Management Licence holder at TGP Europe Limited, received a warning for breaching licence conditions. He failed to take reasonable steps to ensure TGP's compliance with ...

Templeman Stephen Francis

Templeman Stephen Francis

Minor Warning

Following a licence review, Stephen Templeman, a Personal Management Licence holder employed by TGP Europe Limited, was issued a warning. The Commission found he breached general conditions by fail...

SCHLEP Games, Inc.

SCHLEP Games, Inc.

Minor Warning

Schlep Games, Inc. received a formal warning for failing to comply with Social Responsibility Code Provision 3.5.5. The licensee failed to register with GAMSTOP, the national multi-operator self-ex...

SCHLEP Games, Inc.

SCHLEP Games, Inc.

Minor Warning

Following a regulatory review, Schlep Games, Inc. was found to have breached Licence Condition 2.3.1 (Technical Standards) due to inadequate information security controls, policies, and procedures ...

Leisure Electronics Limited

Leisure Electronics Limited

Minor Warning

Following a review, the Commission found that Leisure Electronics Limited failed to comply with Social Responsibility Code Provision 3.5.5, which requires participation in the national multi-operat...

Gamesys Operations Limited

Gamesys Operations Limited

Severe Financial Penalty

Gamesys Operations Limited was found to have breached anti-money laundering (AML) and social responsibility code provisions between November 2021 and July 2022. As a result, the Commission imposed ...

What UKGC enforcement action means

UKGC enforcement action is a formal regulatory process. It isn't a criminal prosecution, and it doesn't work like a court case. When the UKGC investigates an operator, it's exercising powers granted under the Gambling Act 2005 to hold licence holders accountable for how they run their operations.

Investigations can start in several ways. The UKGC conducts thematic reviews across sectors, responds to patterns in consumer complaints, and acts on whistleblower disclosures. An operator can also self-report a failure, which may influence how the case is handled but doesn't remove the possibility of formal action.

When the UKGC investigates an operator

Not every UKGC contact with an operator becomes a public enforcement action. The regulator can engage informally, issue guidance, or raise concerns without proceeding to formal sanction. A public enforcement action means the UKGC found evidence of a licence condition breach serious enough to record and publish.

The conditions in scope come from the Licence Conditions and Codes of Practice, known as the LCCP. The LCCP covers how operators run their anti-money laundering controls, how they identify and interact with customers showing signs of gambling harm, and how they present terms and promotions. Most enforcement actions trace back to failures in one of these areas.

The difference between regulatory and criminal proceedings

This distinction matters. A UKGC enforcement action doesn't result in a criminal conviction. The regulator can impose financial penalties, suspend or revoke a licence, or issue a formal warning, but it can't imprison individuals or pursue criminal prosecution directly. Where evidence of criminal conduct exists, the UKGC can refer cases to law enforcement agencies. That referral is separate from the regulatory action itself.

The practical effect for consumers is that an operator facing enforcement action will usually continue to trade unless its licence is suspended or revoked. A fine, however large the headline figure, leaves the operator active in the market.

What licence conditions are in scope

Social responsibility conditions
Operators must have systems to identify customers at risk of gambling harm, interact with them appropriately, and apply protections such as deposit limits and time-outs. Failures here are the most frequently cited category in UKGC enforcement.
Anti-money laundering conditions
Operators must apply controls to detect and report suspicious financial activity, including source-of-funds checks on high-spending customers. AML deficiencies are the second most common violation category.
Fair and transparent terms
Operators must ensure their bonus terms, withdrawal conditions, and marketing claims are clear and not misleading. This category has been the focus of specific UKGC thematic reviews in recent years.
Management and governance
Operators must maintain accurate records, report material changes, and ensure their key personnel meet fit-and-proper requirements. Governance failures often appear alongside AML or social responsibility breaches rather than in isolation.

The four types of enforcement action

Not all enforcement actions carry the same weight. The UKGC has four distinct tools available, and they differ in what they signal and what consequences follow. Reading enforcement records without understanding those differences produces a misleading picture of an operator's compliance history.

Action type Effect on licence Typical application Reversible?
Licence revocation Permanent removal of licence Repeated serious breaches, fundamental failure of fit-and-proper, criminal referral No — requires a new application
Licence suspension Temporary restriction, operator can't trade Serious breach where remediation is possible; pending investigation outcome Yes — conditional on completing required remediation steps
Formal warning No change to licence status Isolated or less serious breach where the operator has taken corrective steps N/A — licence remains active
Financial penalty / regulatory settlement No change to licence status Breach where harm or loss is established; settlement under Section 117 of the Gambling Act 2005 N/A — licence remains active

Licence revocation and suspension

Revocation is the most serious outcome the UKGC can impose. It's rare, and it's reserved for operators where the regulator has concluded that continued licensing can't be justified. Suspension sits below revocation on the severity scale. It's a conditional restriction, meaning the operator is prevented from trading until it meets specific requirements set by the UKGC. Suspension often precedes a final decision on whether revocation follows.

Formal warnings and requirements

A formal warning is a regulatory rebuke. It records that a breach occurred, but the operator keeps its licence and can continue operating. Warnings are often paired with requirements, meaning specific steps the operator must take within a defined period. Failing to meet those requirements can escalate the matter to a more serious action.

Financial penalties and regulatory settlements

A financial penalty is imposed directly by the UKGC following formal proceedings. A regulatory settlement under Section 117 of the Gambling Act 2005 is different. It's a negotiated outcome that typically includes a payment in lieu of penalty, agreement to remediation steps, and a payment directed to a UKGC-approved third party rather than to the regulator itself. Settlements don't require a formal finding that the operator is guilty of the breach. That distinction matters when you're reading enforcement records, because settlement and direct penalty aren't equivalent outcomes.

How Saferwager scores enforcement severity

Listing enforcement actions without a common scale makes them hard to compare. A formal warning and a licence suspension are both public enforcement outcomes, but they don't represent the same level of regulatory concern. Saferwager's severity scoring gives every recorded action a score from 1 to 5, using four inputs: action type, violation category, evidence of customer harm, and whether the operator has prior enforcement history.

The 1-5 severity scale and what each level indicates

Score Description Typical profile
1 Minor Formal warning, isolated incident, no evidence of customer harm, first action
2 Low Warning with requirements, or small financial penalty, limited harm, single violation category
3 Moderate Financial penalty or regulatory settlement, identifiable harm, two or more violation categories
4 Serious Significant financial penalty, AML or social responsibility failures with customer harm, or repeat action within five years
5 Critical Licence suspension or revocation, widespread customer harm, criminal referral, or persistent repeat violations

Factors that increase a severity score

Action type sets a baseline. A formal warning starts lower on the scale than a financial penalty, which starts lower than a licence suspension. From that baseline, two factors can push the score upward.

AML failures carry more weight than most other violation categories because they indicate a systemic breakdown in financial controls, not just a customer-facing error. Social responsibility failures that involve customers who suffered demonstrated harm also increase the score. And any operator that appears in the enforcement record a second time within five years receives an additional uplift, because a repeat action signals that the first outcome didn't produce lasting compliance change.

Common violation categories and their typical scores

Social responsibility failures and AML deficiencies together account for the bulk of recorded enforcement actions. That pattern reflects where the UKGC has directed its most intensive scrutiny, but it also reflects the structural difficulty operators face in running compliant safer gambling and financial crime controls at scale.

A social responsibility failure with no evidence of specific customer harm typically scores 2 or 3. The same category failure with documented harm to identifiable customers scores 4. AML deficiencies follow a similar pattern. Missing a source-of-funds check on a handful of customers is a different compliance failure from operating without a coherent AML policy for years. Saferwager's scoring tries to reflect that difference rather than treating all AML actions as equivalent.

Enforcement history and operator Trust Scores

Every enforcement action in this hub connects directly to the Trust Score for the relevant operator's page. Enforcement history isn't a separate track. It's one of the explicit inputs into how Saferwager rates an operator's overall safety for consumers.

How past enforcement actions enter a Trust Score

When an enforcement action is recorded, the operator's Trust Score goes under review. The severity score from the action feeds into the calculation, with actions from the past five years carrying more weight than older ones. A single score-1 warning from eight years ago has a limited effect on a current Trust Score. A score-4 action from last year has a material one.

Operators don't earn their way back to a full Trust Score automatically. The recency weighting means older actions diminish over time, but a clean compliance record following a serious action is what drives the recovery. An operator that received a serious enforcement action and then received another one shortly after won't see that first action age out at the same rate.

Why fine size alone isn't a reliable measure of risk

Headline fine figures get reported as a proxy for how seriously the UKGC treated a case. That's a poor proxy. A £6 million penalty against an operator generating hundreds of millions in annual gross gambling yield is arithmetically different from the same figure against a much smaller licensee. The proportional burden, and so the deterrent effect, isn't the same.

Fine size also doesn't tell you what the operator did wrong. Two operators could receive the same financial penalty for entirely different violation types, with entirely different implications for how they treat customers going forward. Saferwager's severity scoring uses the violation type, the evidence of harm, and the action type as the primary inputs, not the fine amount.

What repeat enforcement signals about an operator

An operator that appears more than once in the enforcement record carries a materially elevated risk signal. A single enforcement action can reflect an isolated failure, meaning a specific system that broke down or a gap that's since been closed. Two enforcement actions within a short window suggest something different: that the compliance function isn't producing durable change, or that the organisation's approach to regulatory requirements is deeply inadequate.

Holding a valid UKGC licence doesn't mean a high Trust Score. An operator can hold a current licence in good standing and still carry a materially reduced Trust Score on Saferwager because of its enforcement history. Licence status and Trust Score are separate assessments. The UKGC's job is to maintain minimum standards across the market. Saferwager's Trust Scores are designed to help consumers identify which operators consistently exceed those minimum standards.

Frequently Asked Questions

What triggers a UKGC enforcement action?
Enforcement is typically triggered by a UKGC investigation following a thematic review, consumer complaint patterns, or a whistleblower disclosure. The most common triggers are failures in AML controls and social responsibility procedures, though fair and transparent terms violations also appear regularly. Operators can self-report compliance failures, which may affect how the case is handled but doesn't prevent the UKGC from taking formal action. The investigation process can take months from initial contact to a published outcome.
What's the difference between a UKGC fine and a regulatory settlement?
A financial penalty is imposed directly by the UKGC following formal proceedings and constitutes a finding that a licence condition was breached. A regulatory settlement under Section 117 of the Gambling Act 2005 is a negotiated outcome where the operator agrees to a payment in lieu of penalty alongside remediation steps. Settlements are often directed to a UKGC-approved third party rather than to the regulator, and they don't require a formal finding of breach in the same way a direct penalty does. Both types appear in Saferwager's enforcement records and both contribute to a severity score.
Can a gambling operator keep its licence after an enforcement action?
Yes. In the majority of recorded enforcement actions, the operator retains its licence. Only revocation or suspension directly restricts trading. Financial penalties and formal warnings are issued while the licence remains active, so an operator fined for social responsibility failures can continue taking bets the same day the decision is published. Retaining a valid licence doesn't mean the operator's Saferwager Trust Score is unaffected. Enforcement history feeds directly into how that score is calculated.
Which violation categories appear most often in UKGC enforcement?
Social responsibility failures are the most frequently cited category, covering inadequate safer gambling controls and failure to interact appropriately with customers showing signs of harm. AML deficiencies, particularly gaps in source-of-funds checks and suspicious activity reporting, are the second most common. These two categories together account for the bulk of recorded actions. Fair and transparent terms violations are less frequent but have been the subject of specific UKGC thematic reviews, which means they tend to appear in clusters.
How does Saferwager use enforcement history in its Trust Scores?
Each enforcement action gets a severity score from 1 to 5 based on action type, violation category, evidence of customer harm, and whether the operator has prior enforcement history. Actions from the past five years carry more weight in the Trust Score calculation than older ones. Operators with more than one enforcement action receive an additional impact reflecting the elevated risk signal that repeat violations represent. An operator with a current UKGC licence can still carry a materially reduced Trust Score if its enforcement history is substantial.