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The Department of Culture, Media and Sport has opened a consultation on Gambling Commission funding, marking the first fees review since 2021.
Mar 16, 2026 · 2 min read

The Department of Culture, Media and Sport has launched a consultation examining the Gambling Commission's funding structure, marking the regulator's first comprehensive fees review since 2021.
The consultation, published on 28 January 2026, will remain open until 29 March 2026, providing industry stakeholders with a two-month window to contribute to discussions on the Commission's future financial framework.
The review stems from commitments outlined in the 2023 white paper, which established the need to reassess the Commission's fee structure to ensure adequate resources for delivering core regulatory responsibilities and implementing Gambling Act Review commitments.
The Gambling Commission has welcomed the consultation process, noting that the outcomes will provide crucial certainty regarding the regulator's income streams for upcoming years.
Consultation Timeline
The Department of Culture, Media and Sport's consultation on the Gambling Commission's funding structure runs from 28 January 2026 to 29 March 2026, giving stakeholders exactly two months to provide input on the regulator's future financial framework.
This fees review represents a significant checkpoint for UK gambling regulation funding. With five years elapsed since the last comprehensive assessment, operators and stakeholders face potential adjustments to their regulatory cost structures. The consultation's timing aligns with broader regulatory modernisation efforts, suggesting fees may be recalibrated to support enhanced oversight capabilities in an evolving market landscape.
The consultation closes on 29 March 2026, providing a two-month window for industry stakeholder contributions.
The review stems from commitments in the 2023 white paper and ensures the Commission has adequate resources for core regulatory responsibilities. It's the first comprehensive assessment since 2021.
Operators may face adjustments to their regulatory cost structures as fees could be recalibrated to support enhanced oversight capabilities in the evolving market.
First Review in Five Years
This marks the Gambling Commission's first comprehensive fees review since 2021, with potential adjustments to regulatory cost structures affecting operators across the UK gambling industry as part of broader regulatory modernisation efforts.
According to UK Gambling Commission.
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This content reflects a general overview of regulatory frameworks based on publicly available information. It does not constitute legal advice or a legal opinion. iGamingWriter.blog disclaims any liability arising from reliance on this material.

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