British sports fans are being forced to pay through the nose as illegal streaming and black-market bookmaking continue to thrive in the UK. A staggering 3.6 billion illicit streams of sports events were detected last year, more than doubling from just three years ago.
The problem is not just a matter of piracy; it's also a gateway for unlicensed gambling, with nine out of ten illegal streams featuring adverts for dodgy bookmakers. In fact, the number of unlicensed operators has exploded in recent years, raking in £379m in the first half of 2025 alone, which is nearly 9% of Britain's £8.2 billion online gambling market.
The Campaign for Fairer Gambling says that sports streaming is being deliberately used to bring unlicensed gambling into the mainstream, targeting vulnerable individuals and young people who have been excluded from the regulated industry. This is a worrying trend, as Ismail Vali, founder of Yield Sec, notes: "Unlicensed gambling is by far the largest and most prevalent 'media partner' to the criminal business of illegal streaming of sports events."
The issue is so severe that even the government has taken notice, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves announcing £26m in funding for the Gambling Commission to tackle the problem. However, campaigners argue that this funding is insufficient, and that the regulator needs more support to combat the issue.
Tax changes due to be introduced in April are also set to fuel the growth of unlicensed operators, as they increase online gaming duty from 21% to 40%. This has sparked concerns within the industry that the problem will only get worse unless something is done to address it.
The Premier League is also feeling the effects, with its anti-piracy team successfully removing over 230,000 live streams from social media platforms and more than 430,000 copyright-infringing links from Google last season. However, these efforts are being undermined by the sheer scale of the problem, which continues to grow.
As Derek Webb, a multimillionaire former professional poker player and Labour donor who founded and funds the Campaign for Fairer Gambling, puts it: "Britain is becoming a soft touch." He argues that the industry has allowed the global soft power of sport to be infected by organised criminality, and that more needs to be done to tackle the issue.
The fight against piracy and unlicensed gambling in Britain is a complex one, but it's clear that something needs to be done to address this growing problem before it's too late.
The problem is not just a matter of piracy; it's also a gateway for unlicensed gambling, with nine out of ten illegal streams featuring adverts for dodgy bookmakers. In fact, the number of unlicensed operators has exploded in recent years, raking in £379m in the first half of 2025 alone, which is nearly 9% of Britain's £8.2 billion online gambling market.
The Campaign for Fairer Gambling says that sports streaming is being deliberately used to bring unlicensed gambling into the mainstream, targeting vulnerable individuals and young people who have been excluded from the regulated industry. This is a worrying trend, as Ismail Vali, founder of Yield Sec, notes: "Unlicensed gambling is by far the largest and most prevalent 'media partner' to the criminal business of illegal streaming of sports events."
The issue is so severe that even the government has taken notice, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves announcing £26m in funding for the Gambling Commission to tackle the problem. However, campaigners argue that this funding is insufficient, and that the regulator needs more support to combat the issue.
Tax changes due to be introduced in April are also set to fuel the growth of unlicensed operators, as they increase online gaming duty from 21% to 40%. This has sparked concerns within the industry that the problem will only get worse unless something is done to address it.
The Premier League is also feeling the effects, with its anti-piracy team successfully removing over 230,000 live streams from social media platforms and more than 430,000 copyright-infringing links from Google last season. However, these efforts are being undermined by the sheer scale of the problem, which continues to grow.
As Derek Webb, a multimillionaire former professional poker player and Labour donor who founded and funds the Campaign for Fairer Gambling, puts it: "Britain is becoming a soft touch." He argues that the industry has allowed the global soft power of sport to be infected by organised criminality, and that more needs to be done to tackle the issue.
The fight against piracy and unlicensed gambling in Britain is a complex one, but it's clear that something needs to be done to address this growing problem before it's too late.