14 Mar 2026

The UK Gambling Commission released its official industry statistics for Quarter 2 of the financial year spanning April 2025 to March 2026, covering the period from July to September 2025; these figures paint a clear picture of the British gambling landscape, where total Gross Gambling Yield (GGY) climbed to £4.3 billion when including lotteries, while excluding them drops the total to a still robust £3.2 billion. Operators across land-based and online platforms contributed to this yield, reflecting sustained activity even as the year edges toward its March 2026 close.
GGY, which measures the net takings after payouts from customer bets and stakes, serves as the primary benchmark for sector health; data reveals how betting shops, casinos, remote platforms, and bingo halls all played their parts, with non-remote betting alone accounting for £592 million in GGY. That's no small feat, especially since it represents 48.2% of the overall non-remote GGY, underscoring betting's dominance in physical venues.
Across Great Britain, 5,782 betting shops remained operational during this quarter, a number that highlights the enduring presence of traditional wagering hubs despite the digital shift; these venues generated £592 million in non-remote betting GGY, positioning them as the heavyweight in the physical gambling space where slots, machines, and over-the-counter bets drive revenue. Observers note how this figure, comprising nearly half of all non-remote yields, signals resilience in high streets and communities, even as online alternatives proliferate.
But here's the thing: non-remote sectors as a whole leaned heavily on betting's contributions, with the £592 million underscoring a sector that adapts quietly to regulatory pressures and consumer habits; take one typical operator in the Midlands who, according to similar past patterns, relies on football season peaks to bolster quarterly returns, and you'll see why these shops persist. Total non-remote GGY, buoyed by this betting slice, maintained its share amid broader industry dynamics.

Shifting online, remote casino, betting, and bingo sectors collectively produced £2.0 billion in GGY, a chunk that dwarfs many land-based counterparts and points to the digital migration that's reshaping the industry; platforms handling these activities saw yields from slots, table games, virtual sports, and live dealer sessions, all fueled by smartphone access and seamless apps. Data indicates this remote trio's performance aligns with ongoing trends where convenience trumps location, pulling in younger demographics who favor quick bets on Premier League matches or bingo draws from home.
What's interesting here lies in the blend: remote betting intertwined with casino offerings created a hybrid appeal, while bingo held steady as a social staple; experts who've tracked these metrics over quarters observe how £2.0 billion reflects not just volume but sophisticated player engagement tools like bonuses and live streaming, which keep stakes rolling without the need for a physical visit. And as the financial year progresses toward March 2026, this remote strength suggests platforms will continue dominating future reports.
Total GGY at £4.3 billion, including lotteries, captures the full spectrum from National Lottery draws to everyday punts, yet stripping those out to £3.2 billion spotlights core commercial gambling; lotteries, often state-linked, inflate the headline but don't reflect operator profits directly, so analysts zero in on the adjusted figure for true sector pulse. Non-remote betting's £592 million, that 48.2% powerhouse, contrasts sharply with remote's £2.0 billion, illustrating a tale of two worlds where physical bets thrive on immediacy and online on scale.
Turns out, the 5,782 betting shops underpin this balance; each location, from bustling London corners to quieter northern towns, processes thousands in daily turnover, contributing to the non-remote total that betting commands. Researchers studying Commission data point out how seasonal factors like summer festivals or early autumn sports ramps likely boosted these yields, creating a quarter where land-based held ground while remote accelerated.
These metrics, drawn straight from the quarterly report, offer operators a roadmap; one study of prior quarters revealed similar patterns where remote growth outpaces physical by double digits, yet betting shops' stability prevents any cliff-edge decline.
The report highlights ongoing trends in both land-based and online betting, where non-remote's betting reliance meets remote's explosive trio; figures show how £592 million from shops feeds into a non-remote ecosystem that's predictable, community-rooted, while £2.0 billion remote underscores scalability through tech. People who've followed these releases know the rubber meets the road in hybrids: apps mimicking shop experiences or shops offering digital tie-ins to retain footfall.
So, with 5,782 venues dotting the map, physical betting's 48.2% share isn't fading; it's evolving, perhaps through safer gambling initiatives that Commission data indirectly supports via steady yields. Remote's £2.0 billion, meanwhile, benefits from broader access, pulling in bets on everything from horse racing to esports; that's where the action heats up, as platforms leverage data analytics for personalized odds, keeping GGY climbing.
It's noteworthy that total yields, hovering around £4.3 billion gross, position the sector for a strong half-year push into 2026; observers tracking toward March note how Q2's stability bodes well, especially with holidays and major events on the horizon that historically spike activity.
Operators digesting these stats adjust strategies accordingly; betting shop chains, with their 5,782 strongholds, invest in modernizations like cashless betting to match remote's £2.0 billion agility, while online firms eye the £592 million non-remote benchmark for crossover potential. Data from this quarter suggests a sector that's balanced yet tilting digital, where GGY exclusions reveal £3.2 billion in pure play driving jobs, taxes, and innovation.
Yet the Commission's role looms large, enforcing standards that keep yields sustainable; take cases where venues complied with affordability checks, indirectly sustaining the 48.2% betting dominance by fostering trust. As March 2026 approaches, Q3 previews will build on this, but for now, £4.3 billion sets the tone.
Here's where it gets interesting: lotteries' inclusion swells the total, but core metrics like remote's billion-plus haul show where growth hides; experts predict steady shop numbers if yields hold, preventing closures that plagued earlier years.
In summary, the UK Gambling Commission's Q2 release for July to September 2025 delivers concrete evidence of a thriving sector, with £4.3 billion total GGY (or £3.2 billion sans lotteries), 5,782 betting shops fueling £592 million non-remote betting (48.2% of its category), and remote casino, betting, bingo at £2.0 billion; these numbers, rooted in official data, affirm trends bridging physical and digital worlds as the April 2025-March 2026 year unfolds. Operators and stakeholders now pivot on this foundation, eyes fixed on sustained performance through the fiscal close.