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Tech October 25, 2025

Autumn Budget 2025: UK gambling firms brace themselves for sharp tax rises – what to expect

Autumn Budget 2025: UK gambling firms brace themselves for sharp tax rises – what to expect
Illustration of UK gambling reform showing playing cards, poker chips, and dice blended with Big Ben and the Union Jack flag. Autumn Budget 2025 UK gambling firms brace themselves for sharp tax rises - what to expect

The UK government is preparing a sweeping overhaul of gambling taxes in its Autumn Budget 2025, which could shake up one of the country’s most profitable yet controversial industries.


Chancellor Rachael Reeves has been steadily increasing pressure on gambling operators, with reports from theOffice for Budget Responsibilitysuggesting the new measures could raise around £4 billion ($5 billion) in revenue.

What gambling measures are being proposed in the Autumn Budget 2025?

UK gambling companies are bracing for a major shake-up. Reeves has hinted thatGeneral Betting Dutyon sports betting, online or in betting shops, excluding horse racing, would rise from 15% to as high as 30%, while online slot taxes might climb from 20% to 50%. She says the goal is to ensure that gambling firms “pay their fair share.”

What has led to this potential increase?

The2024 Budget, submitted by Reeves, the first from her party in over fifteen years, avoided hitting gambling firms in their pocket. Instead, it laid the path for reform, with lobbyists attempting to dissuade members of the UK parliament who were spearheading these proposed changes.


In the lead-up to the 2024 budget, UK gambling companies saw their shares take a hit, cutting more than £2 billion from the value of some of the biggest names in the industry. Entain, which owns Ladbrokes, dropped 7%; Evoke, the parent company of 888, slid 12%; and Flutter, which owns Paddy Power, was down 5.7%. These market reactions highlighted investor anxiety ahead of the last year’s budget. Even so, leaders from the major betting brands have been speaking out more openly as the 2025 budget approaches.


A proposed tax increase could hit bookmakers hard, raising their rate from 15% to 21% to match what online casinos and gaming sites pay. Industry insiders warn the move could be devastating for sports like horse racing.


TheBetting & Gaming Council (BGC) published a statementto the Treasury, saying “Ministers have been clear in public and in parliament that they would be meeting with the relevant stakeholders as part of the consultation on tax harmonisation proposals. That includes the BGC, which represents companies employing over 100,000 people and a sector enjoyed safely by millions of customers each month.”


A key influence in the current debate is a report by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), which linkedgambling-related harm to higher child poverty rates.


Gordon Brown, who held the position of Chancellor of the Exchequer, is a leading figure with the IPPR, and he has suggested the £4 billion ($5 billion) void could be filled by the gambling reform and tax increases.


Speaking to the Guardian in August, he said: “Time to tax the highly profitable gambling industry to pay for action on child poverty. Gambling will not build a Britain for the future, but children free of poverty will.”


In the wake of Brown and the IPPR’s analysis and comment, 101 Labour MPs signed a letter toreform gambling, with taxation increasesthe key desirable to reduce child poverty.


The ministers involved shone the light on the IPPR research saying that if gambling was reformed in the United Kingdom, 500,000 children would be “lifted out of poverty.”

Industry response from gambling operators over Autumn Budget 2025 proposals

BGC chief executive Grainne Hurst wasless than complimentary of Brown’s decisionto target gambling firms, seeing it as hypocritical as the former Chancellor had been integral to the reform process previously.


“Long since hailed as a masterstroke, his interventions raised more tax, secured more jobs, and created one of this country’s global business success stories,” said Hurst.


The British Horseracing Authority (BHA) has been active in addressing the issue of gambling reform in the United Kingdom at every party conference for the biggest parliamentary groups.


BHA Chief Executive Brant Dunshea warned thathigher taxes could have a “catastrophic” impacton British racing and related jobs.


He said the sport is “already in a precarious financial position and research has shown that a tax rise on racing could be catastrophic,” for jobs related to the hospitality, racing and retail environment.

UK job losses could be a result of these tax increases

William Hill, owned by Evoke plc under 888 Holdings, was vocal about the possibility that reform and incoming taxation hikes could have on their physical retail locations.


The company’s share value has dropped by 30% across the financial year, and it publicly stated that a possible200 locations would close, causing 1,500 job losses.


Betfred’s co-founder Fred Done called the proposed tax increases the greatest threat the gambling sector has seen in over half a decade.


He spoke of theperils that physical locations would facein a BBC interview, saying, “We would have to close it down. I’m talking job losses. We’re talking probably 7,500.”


As the Autumn Budget approaches on November 26, 2025, Labour faces a key test of its economic strategy. The planned gambling tax rises could redefine the line between public welfare and private enterprise and determine whether the party’s promise of “fair growth” can withstand fiscal reality.


Featured image: Canva


The postAutumn Budget 2025: UK gambling firms brace themselves for sharp tax rises – what to expectappeared first onReadWrite.

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