HomeInsightsA flurry of White Paper related developments: Stake limits, statutory levy and IP blocking measures

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The UK Gambling Minister, Baroness Twycross, updated on the progress of three major White Paper related developments at the Betting & Gaming Council AGM earlier today.

Stake limits for online slots

The Gambling Act 2005 (Operating Licence Conditions) (Amendment) Regulations 2025 was at last signed into law on Tuesday 25 February 2025. The statutory instrument makes it a new licence condition applying to remote casino operating licences to introduce a maximum stake limit for online slots games available in Great Britain.

Operators will need to implement the previously announced £5 limit per spin by 9 April 2025 and will then have a further six week to implement a lower £2 limit per spin for 18 to 24 year olds which must be in place by 21 May 2025.

Statutory levy

The Gambling Levy Regulations were also affirmed by parliament on Tuesday and come into force on 6 April 2025. They formalise the gambling levy first announced in November which is intended to raise over £100m for gambling-related harm prevention via a payment of a percentage of industry stakeholder profits to the Gambling Commission.

Applying a new tiered scheme which will be between 0.1% to 1.1% of gross gambling yield (GGY) depending on business type, all UK-licensed gambling businesses (B2C and B2B) will  need to make their first levy payment to the Commission on 1 October.

Read here for more on the statutory levy and our views on it.

IP blocking

On Tuesday, the Crime and Policing Bill was introduced to Parliament and includes provisions to strengthen the Commission’s powers to obtain orders to take down IP addresses and domain names linked to illicit gambling operations.

Baroness Twycross noted that: “Vigilance is vital when the illegal market threatens revenue for licensed operators and the safety of consumers. The reforms we have introduced, in collaboration with the Gambling Commission, strike a balance between industry growth and enhanced player protections.”

This is considered a key component in the Commission’s initiatives to tackle the so-called black market.