14 Mar 2026
UK Gambling Commission Releases Q2 2025 Industry Stats: Betting Shops and Remote Growth Take Center Stage

The Latest Drop from the UK Gambling Commission
On February 26, 2026, the UK Gambling Commission published its official quarterly industry statistics covering Quarter 2 of the financial year April 2025 to March 2026—that's July through September 2025 in Great Britain—and the numbers paint a picture of steady expansion, particularly in remote sectors, while traditional betting shops hold their ground amid the broader landscape of 8,254 total gambling premises.
What's interesting here is how these figures, released just as March 2026 kicks off, offer a snapshot right before the financial year's halfway mark, giving operators, regulators, and analysts fresh data to chew on while winter bets wrap up and spring events loom on the horizon.
The report zeroes in on key metrics like Gross Gambling Yield (GGY), which measures the net win for operators after payouts—think of it as the industry's pulse—and total customer-facing GGY hit £4.3 billion for the quarter, marking a 6.6% jump from the same period last year, with remote activities driving much of that uptick since land-based spots faced their usual seasonal ebbs and flows.
Betting Shops: Numbers and Yield Breakdown
Across Great Britain, betting shops numbered 5,782 out of those 8,254 total premises, underscoring their role as a cornerstone of the non-remote sector even as online options proliferate; non-remote betting alone generated £592 million in GGY, accounting for a solid 48.2% of all non-remote GGY, which shows high streets and corners still pull weight, especially for football matches or horse races where punters gather in person.
Data reveals this £592 million figure holds steady against remote counterparts in some ways, yet observers note how it reflects operator resilience; take one typical betting chain that maintains dozens of shops—figures like these suggest they're not fading quietly, but adapting with hybrid models that blend physical visits and app check-ins.
Remote Surge Steals the Show
Turning to remote operations, casino, betting, and bingo combined raked in £2.0 billion in GGY, a hefty slice fueled largely by remote casino at £1.4 billion, which highlights how digital slots and tables draw players anytime, anywhere—smartphones in hand during commutes or evenings at home—pushing boundaries beyond what bricks-and-mortar can match.
But here's the thing: while non-remote betting claims nearly half of its category's yield, remote betting slots into that £2.0 billion mix alongside casino dominance, and bingo chips in too, creating a diversified remote pot that's less vulnerable to weather or local footfall dips.

Total GGY Climbs 6.6%: Drivers and Details
Total customer-facing industry GGY reached £4.3 billion, up 6.6% year-over-year, and remote sector growth takes the credit—remote casino's £1.4 billion stands out as the heavyweight, but betting and bingo add layers, while non-remote's £592 million from betting underscores balance rather than decline.
Researchers who've pored over past quarters point out patterns like this: summer periods often boost remote play due to events like Premier League starts or Wimbledon, yet land-based holds via tourist spots; in this case, the 6.6% rise signals health, not hype, as economic pressures linger into 2026.
So, non-remote GGY overall splits with betting at 48.2%, leaving room for arcades, casinos, and bingo halls to fill the rest, but the report's focus shines on how remote's £2.0 billion eclipses it all, pulling total figures higher and higher.
Premises Breakdown Puts Betting in Perspective
Of 8,254 premises, 5,782 betting shops mean nearly 70% cater to sports and odds, a stat that surprises newcomers but makes sense to veterans who've watched consolidation prune weaker spots while survivors thrive on loyalty programs and live screens; it's not rocket science—location, location, location still rules for impulse bets.
What These Figures Mean for the Landscape
Figures from the February 2026 publication lay bare a dual reality: betting shops at 5,782 strong generate £592 million GGY, a backbone that's 48.2% of non-remote totals, while remote casino leads the £2.0 billion charge at £1.4 billion alongside betting and bingo peers.
People in the industry often find comfort in that 6.6% overall growth to £4.3 billion, since it proves demand endures—online for convenience, shops for the buzz—although seasonal tweaks like quieter Septembers temper raw jumps.
One case stands out: experts tracking year-on-year shifts note how remote casino's billion-plus yield correlates with mobile tech advances, where apps load faster and bonuses lure repeat visits, yet non-remote betting's share reminds everyone physical venues aren't relics just yet.
And as March 2026 unfolds, with Q3 data on deck, these Q2 stats set the stage; operators tweak strategies based on them, regulators eye compliance, and punters keep wagering, knowing the yield reflects a vibrant, evolving market.
Sector-Specific Insights
Remote casino at £1.4 billion dominates the £2.0 billion remote trio, but betting's remote arm contributes too, mirroring non-remote's £592 million in scale if not spotlight; bingo rounds it out, appealing to social players who favor chatty online rooms over solitary spins.
That's where the rubber meets the road: total premises at 8,254 with betting shops claiming over 5,700 means infrastructure supports both worlds, and GGY growth proves they're not clashing but coexisting profitably.
Broader Context Within the Quarter
The Gambling Commission's data emphasizes customer-facing GGY's £4.3 billion milestone, driven by remote's momentum while non-remote betting anchors at £592 million and 48.2% dominance; it's noteworthy that this quarter, spanning peak summer into autumn, captured event-driven spikes without major disruptions.
Observers who've studied similar releases recall how GGY calculations—stakes minus prizes—strip away operator costs for pure yield views, making £4.3 billion a clean benchmark against last year's figures, up 6.6% thanks to tech-savvy remote users flooding casino platforms.
Yet betting shops persist at 5,782, a number that dipped slightly over years but stabilizes here, suggesting mergers and tech integrations keep them viable; one researcher highlighted a chain closing underperformers only to expand digitally, blending the £592 million yield with remote gains.
Conclusion
In wrapping up the UK Gambling Commission's Q2 2025 stats released February 26, 2026, the headline numbers tell a clear story: 5,782 betting shops amid 8,254 premises, non-remote betting's £592 million GGY at 48.2% of its category, remote casino, betting, and bingo's £2.0 billion haul—with casino at £1.4 billion—and total customer-facing GGY climbing 6.6% to £4.3 billion, all powered by remote expansion.
These metrics, fresh as March 2026 begins, equip stakeholders with actionable insights, balancing tradition and innovation in Great Britain's gambling scene, where growth persists and adaptation rules the day.