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What UK operators must disclose about bonus offers

Every gambling offer from a UKGC-licensed operator is a conditional contract. The marketing says 'bonus'. The regulation says 'conditional promotional arrangement with mandatory disclosure'. That distinction drives everything about how offers work in practice.

How LCCP conditions define bonus transparency

LCCP Social Responsibility Code Provision 5 (formerly consolidated under Licence Condition 7 guidance) requires operators to present all bonus terms clearly before a customer opts in. The terms can't sit in a buried FAQ or appear only after registration. They must be accessible at the point where the customer decides whether to engage.

This isn't optional guidance. It's a licence condition. Operators who don't meet it risk enforcement action, and UKGC has acted on this.

The four terms operators must state before opt-in

Wagering requirement
The number of times a bonus amount must be played through before any withdrawal becomes possible. Operators must state both the multiplier and the base it applies to (bonus amount, deposit plus bonus, or winnings).
Withdrawal cap
The maximum amount a player can withdraw from bonus winnings, regardless of how much accumulates during play. This must be disclosed alongside the wagering requirement because it can override it entirely.
Time limit
The period within which wagering must be completed. Uncompleted wagering typically results in forfeiture of the bonus and any associated winnings.
Game restrictions
Which games or categories qualify toward wagering completion. Play on ineligible games doesn't count toward the requirement and can void the bonus entirely.

Why 'free' has regulatory boundaries in bonus marketing

The word 'free' in gambling offers refers to the activation cost, not the outcome. Free spins cost nothing to trigger. Free bets don't require a stake from the player's balance. But winnings from both are subject to whatever terms the operator attaches: wagering, caps, game restrictions, expiry.

The UKGC has addressed this directly. The ASA has upheld complaints where 'free' was used without adequate disclosure of the conditions attached to the outcome.

How bonus terms interact to determine offer value

Operators promote the headline number: a match percentage, a spin count, a free bet amount. Comparison sites rank by it. But the headline is the least informative term in the offer. The actual financial outcome depends on how wagering, caps, and time limits apply to that number.

Why the headline number tells you the least

A deposit bonus headline says '100% up to £100'. That sounds like £100. But the wagering multiplier, withdrawal cap, and time limit determine what that £100 actually becomes. Two operators can offer identical headlines with completely different real outcomes because the downstream terms diverge.

The same applies to free spins (spin value determines the bonus pool, not spin count) and free bets (stake-not-returned mechanics reduce the effective value below the advertised amount).

How the wagering multiplier chains to the bonus base

The wagering requirement creates a playthrough target. The calculation depends on what the multiplier applies to:

  1. The operator sets a bonus base (this varies by offer type: the bonus amount alone, the deposit plus bonus combined, or the winnings from free spins/bets)
  2. The wagering multiplier is applied to that base (e.g., 35x on a £50 bonus = £1,750 in required wagers)
  3. The player must complete that £1,750 in wagers on eligible games before requesting any withdrawal from bonus funds
  4. Only play on qualifying games counts toward the target. Ineligible game play doesn't reduce the requirement.

The same 35x multiplier produces very different playthrough targets depending on the base. Applied to a £50 bonus alone, it's £1,750. Applied to a £50 deposit plus £50 bonus, it's £3,500. The multiplier number looks identical. The obligation doubles.

When a withdrawal cap overrides the wagering outcome

A withdrawal cap sets the maximum amount a player can take out from bonus winnings. If the cap is £50 and the wagering requirement would theoretically allow larger withdrawals, the cap overrides. The player can't withdraw more than £50 regardless of completing the playthrough.

This creates situations where the wagering is technically achievable but the payout is fixed. A player who meets all conditions and accumulates £300 in bonus balance still walks away with the capped amount. The cap is the binding constraint, not the multiplier.

What ASA and CAP rules require in offer advertising

The UKGC regulates what operators must do on their own sites. The ASA (Advertising Standards Authority) regulates how operators promote offers in advertising. Both apply to gambling offers, and they cover different ground.

Significant conditions under CAP Code Rule 8.17

Under CAP Code Rule 8.17, promotional marketing must include all significant conditions or refer to them clearly. For gambling offers, wagering requirements and withdrawal caps are significant conditions. They materially affect what the customer receives.

The ASA has upheld complaints against gambling operators whose bonus promotions failed to make wagering requirements and withdrawal caps sufficiently prominent. A headline claiming 'free' spins or 'bonus' funds while burying a 40x wagering condition in small-print terms doesn't meet the prominence standard.

The ASA publishes these rulings, and they inform how the standard is applied to future complaints. The rulings are public record.

The gap between advertising compliance and on-site disclosure

An operator can meet CAP Code requirements in its advertising while still having incomplete terms on the landing page. The advert says '35x wagering applies, see terms'. The landing page terms are partial or missing detail on withdrawal caps, game restrictions, or time limits.

When terms are incomplete on the operator's own site, it raises a question about whether disclosure obligations under both LCCP and the CAP Code are being met in practice. The advertising passes. The on-site experience doesn't.

How this listing is compiled and what each field shows

The offers on this page come from UKGC-licensed operator sites. Bonus terms are read from each site's published content, not supplied by the operator or sourced from an affiliate feed. No commercial relationship determines which offers appear or how they're ordered.

Where the offer data comes from

The terms for each offer, including wagering requirement, withdrawal cap, deposit requirement, and eligible games, are identified from the operator's published bonus pages and terms and conditions. Each offer card shows the terms that were accessible on the site at the time of review.

FieldWhat it showsSource
Offer typeCategory of bonus (free spins, deposit bonus, free bet, cashback, etc.)Operator's bonus page
Wagering requirementMultiplier applied to bonus baseOperator's T&Cs
Withdrawal capMaximum withdrawable from bonus winningsOperator's T&Cs
Deposit requirementMinimum qualifying deposit to activate the offerOperator's bonus page
Trust ScoreOperator-level score from six sub-scoresSaferwager scoring algorithm
Domain ScoreSite-level score covering SSL, DNS, WHOIS, ageSaferwager domain analysis

What Trust Score and Domain Score add to each listing

Trust Score evaluates the operator behind the offer across six dimensions: Licensing, Compliance, Corporate, Longevity, Technical, and Transparency. An operator with enforcement history for bonus-related violations scores lower on the Compliance sub-score. Each offer card links to a site page where the full Domain Score breakdown is accessible, and from there to the operator's Trust Score profile.

The site-level Domain Score covers SSL configuration, DNS maturity (SPF, DKIM, DMARC records), WHOIS transparency, and domain age, all scored independently. These are relevant because bonus activation and account management happen through the site directly.

Why some operators appear and others don't

An operator appears in this listing when it holds a UKGC licence, runs an active site with published offer terms, and has had those terms reviewed. Operators without active offers, without published terms, or without a current UKGC licence don't appear. The listing reflects what's publicly available from licensed operators, not a curated selection.

How offer types differ and what each dedicated page covers

Gambling offers split into two dimensions that people often conflate: the offer type (the bonus mechanic itself) and the offer condition (the terms governing it). Free spins and free bets are types. No deposit and no wagering are conditions. A single offer can combine one type with multiple conditions.

Offer types defined by their bonus mechanic

Free spins
Plays on slot games at an operator-assigned spin value. The spin count gets promoted; the spin value, wagering base, and withdrawal cap determine actual outcome. Dedicated page covers how spin value and wagering interact.
Free bets
A single wager on a specified event where the operator provides the stake. Typically uses a stake-not-returned mechanic: if the bet wins, the player receives the profit but not the original stake amount. Betting offers often carry different wagering structures from casino bonuses.
Deposit bonuses
Operator matches a percentage of the player's deposit up to a cap. The wagering base (bonus only vs deposit plus bonus) creates very different playthrough targets from the same match percentage.
Cashback
Returns a percentage of net losses over a qualifying period. The key distinction: whether the return is paid as cash (withdrawable) or bonus funds (subject to wagering). That single difference changes the offer's value entirely.
Welcome offers
The package given to new customers on registration or first deposit. Often multi-part: a deposit bonus combined with free spins, or a free bet alongside a cashback guarantee. The terms for each component can differ within the same welcome package.
Tournaments
Competitive events with prize pools distributed among top performers. Entry cost, prize distribution method, and qualifying game restrictions vary between operators.

Offer conditions that cut across types

No deposit
The operator doesn't require a qualifying payment to activate the bonus. Account registration and identity verification are still mandatory for all UKGC-licensed operators. Wagering requirements, withdrawal caps, and time limits typically still apply. The 'free' part is the entry condition, not the outcome.
No wagering
Winnings convert directly to withdrawable cash without a playthrough requirement. Withdrawal caps, game restrictions, and time limits can still apply. No wagering removes one condition. It doesn't remove the others.

Each dedicated page lists offers of that type with the same term detail and operator data as this page, filtered to the specific mechanic. The type-specific content on each page covers the mechanics and distinctions that apply to that category alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the most common types of UK gambling offers?
UK gambling offers split into welcome offers (given to new customers) and ongoing promotions. Welcome offers typically combine deposit bonuses with free spins or free bets as a multi-part package. Ongoing offers include cashback, tournaments, and loyalty rewards. Each type has different bonus terms and wagering structures, covered on dedicated pages for free spins, free bets, deposit bonuses, and cashback.
How do wagering requirements work on gambling offers?
A wagering requirement is a multiplier applied to a bonus base, creating a playthrough target. The base varies by offer type: on deposit bonuses it can be the bonus alone or the deposit plus bonus combined, on free spins it's typically the spin value multiplied by spin count. A 35x requirement on a £50 base means £1,750 in wagers before any withdrawal. A withdrawal cap can override the wagering outcome entirely if the cap is lower than the accumulated balance.
Are no deposit gambling offers really free?
No deposit means the operator doesn't require a qualifying payment to activate the bonus. Wagering requirements, withdrawal caps, game restrictions, and time limits still apply in most cases. All UKGC-licensed operators require account registration and identity verification regardless of the deposit requirement. The entry cost is removed, but the conditions on winnings from the bonus typically remain.
What is the difference between a free bet and free spins?
A free bet is a single wager on a specified event, typically using a stake-not-returned mechanic where the player keeps the profit but not the original stake amount. Free spins are multiple plays on slot games at an operator-assigned spin value, with winnings subject to wagering and withdrawal caps. The two have different wagering bases, different withdrawal mechanics, and different qualifying conditions. A deposit bonus is a third category entirely, matching a percentage of the player's own deposit.
How does Saferwager score gambling operators?
Trust Score evaluates operators across six dimensions: Licensing, Compliance, Corporate, Longevity, Technical, and Transparency. Each sub-score is computed from publicly verifiable data including UKGC licence records, enforcement history, Companies House filings, and technical infrastructure. Domain Score evaluates the site itself: SSL configuration, DNS maturity, WHOIS transparency, and domain age. Both scores are algorithmic with no commercial input.