Bingo and casinos The game of
Housie was popularised in the armed forces in the
Second World War and brought back to Britain after the end. The
Betting and Gaming Act 1960 allowed commercial
bingo halls to be set up, provided they were established as members-only clubs and had to get their take from membership fees and charges rather than as a percentage of the entry fees. bingo hall in Birmingham Casinos had a similar history, with requirement for licensing from the Gaming Board of Great Britain and for casinos to be
members only clubs. The number of gaming machines in casinos was limited at 10. The Casino Club
Port Talbot in Wales – believed to be Britain's first legal casino – was established in 1961 by gambling mogul George Alfred James. James opened several casino-cum-cabaret and fine dining establishments in the 1960s, including the Charlie Chester Casino and Golden Horseshoe in London and the Kingsway and Grand Casino in
Southport. The
Gaming Act 1968 (c. 65) liberalised the law, paving the way for more commercial casinos. The first very popular game was
Chemmy, popularised by the
Clermont Club, in
London. The
Gambling Act 2005 paved the way for larger resort style
casinos to be built, albeit in a controlled manner with one being built every few years until the Act is fully implemented. Many towns and cities bid to host one of these so-called "super casinos", which will be similar to those found in
Las Vegas. On 30 January 2007
Manchester was announced as the winning bid to be the location of the first super casino. On 29 March 2007, the
House of Lords urged the Government to review plans for the super casino in Manchester. Instead it supported plans for 16 smaller casinos, including ones in
Solihull and
Wolverhampton. In 2007, then Prime Minister
Gordon Brown said that the Government would not be proceeding with the super casino in Manchester. Gaming machines are divided into a number of
categories, mainly depending upon the stakes and payouts involved, and whether there is an element of skill (these are known officially as AWPs or "
Amusement with Prizes" machines).
Gambling on sports betting shop in
Rawtenstall, Lancashire
Sports gambling has a long history in the United Kingdom, having been controlled for many decades, and more recently relaxed. The 1960 Act legalised off-course
bookmakers.
Pool betting on horses is a monopoly of
The Tote. There are over 1,000 betting shops located in London. There is a large market in the United Kingdom for gambling on competitive sports at
bookmakers (betting shops) or licensed websites, particularly for
horse,
greyhound racing and
football. The last of these also has an associated form of gambling known as the
football pools, in which players win by correctly predicting the outcome of each week's matches. The online sports betting market in the UK is estimated to be worth £650 million which has seen a compounding annual growth rate from 2009 to 2012 of approximately 7%. The total online gambling population in the UK is estimated at 2.1 million customers. Sports gambling is advertised on television at times when children and young people are watching. There are calls for the government to control this. Dr Heather Wardle, a gambling behaviour expert from the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said, "It’s hard to prove what harm is being done because it’s a generational thing and the harm comes much further down the line. We’re creating the conditions that normalise gambling for a generation". The gambling industry has announced voluntary curbs on television advertising. Stephen van Rooyen of
Sky UK, maintains the TV ad ban is meaningless unless the industry also curbs advertising on other media. Rooyen stated, "The gambling industry are ignoring the fact they spend five times more on online marketing than they do on TV. By cutting TV ads, they’ll simply spend more online, bombarding people’s smartphones, tablets and social media feeds with even more gambling ads. A proportionate and responsible limit to gambling advertising across all media is the right thing to do". The voluntary reduction also does not prevent shirt sponsorship, ads that run around hoardings in stadiums, so that gambling firms will still feature prominently during live sport. Simon Stevens, then-chief executive of the
NHS, said in 2013 that he "disapproved of eight betting firms" because "they do not pay towards NHS costs in countering gambling addiction."
Lotteries A statute of 1698 provided that in England lotteries were by default illegal unless specifically authorised by statute. The aim of the statute was that before the era of mass and efficient communications, those running national lotteries could claim to one part of the country that the winner lived in another, and do the same the other way: thus taking all the stakes and paying nothing out. A 1934 Act legalised small lotteries, which was further liberalised in 1956 and 1976, but even then severely limited in the stakes, and the geographical scope that they could cover, so there could be no chance of the lottery organisers deceiving the bettors. There could be no big national lottery until the Government established one, however. Other countrywide lotteries do exist, but work by dividing the prizes and stakes strictly on a geographical basis into small areas and thus technically not becoming a national lottery. The
Gambling Commission called the Health Lottery in 2010 "a very fine line" and insisted it would only be legal if split into at least 31 separate, identifiable schemes so as not to become "a
de facto National Lottery".
National Lottery The United Kingdom's state-franchised
lottery is known as the
National Lottery, which was set up under government licence in 1993. Several games are run under this brand, including
Lotto and
Thunderball. As with other lotteries players choose a set of numbers, say 6 from 59, with six numbers then being drawn at random. Players win cash prizes depending on how many numbers they match. The National Lottery launched a
pan-European "super-lottery", called
EuroMillions, in 2004. Currently this is available in nine countries. In the United Kingdom, the national lottery has so far raised several billions of pounds for
Good Causes, a programme which distributes money via grants. 28% of lottery revenue goes towards the fund, along with all unclaimed prizes. Additionally, 12% goes to the state. The prize fund is 45% of revenue, with the remaining 15% going towards running costs and profits for the lottery organisers and ticket sellers. The odds of specific combinations occurring in the United Kingdom national lottery are as follows:
Health Lottery In February 2011 the media tycoon
Richard Desmond announced the launch of a new Health Lottery, with the aim of raising a minimum of £50 million each year for health-related charities. Tickets cost £1 each and 20% of ticket revenues go to the charities involved.
Postcode Lottery The
UK Postcode Lottery is in aid of charity, and works by using an entrant's postcode plus a unique three-digit number as their ticket number. Prizes are drawn every Thursday.
Scratchcards Scratchcards are small pieces of cardboard where an area has been covered by a substance that cannot be seen through but can be scratched off. Under this area are concealed the items/pictures that must be revealed in order to win.
Amusement arcades The Gambling Commission identifies three types of
amusement arcades • adult gaming centres (AGCs) • licensed family entertainment centres (FECs) • unlicensed FECs. In 2009/2010 the FECs made up 81% of the arcade sector in gross gambling yield.
Gambling in other venues Remote gambling Until the
Betting and Gaming Act 1960 off-course betting in person was illegal, but bets by telephone were legal since this was not considered, by the letter of the law, "resorting to a house kept for the purpose of betting". However, it was frequent for "bookie's runners" to take and run bets from a
public telephone to the bookmaker himself. Remote gambling is growing in popularity in the United Kingdom. According to the survey conducted by the Gambling Commission, as of March 2010, 10.7% of the 8,000 adults surveyed said they had participated in at least one form of remote gambling in the previous 4 weeks. In 2009 the figure was 10.5%, in 2008 – 7.2%, in 2007 – 8.8%, in 2006 – 7.2%. The major part of these gamblers was represented by those playing the National Lottery online. Upon their exclusion, the figures are 5.7%, 5.7%, 5.6% and 5.2% respectively. All forms of online gambling are licensed by the Gambling Commission and therefore can be legally provided in the country under a licence from the commission. The commission's site has details of both licensed operators and applicants. Many bookmakers such as
888sport,
Betfair,
Ladbrokes and
William Hill have offshore operations but these are largely for overseas customers since no tax is due on winnings of bets in the UK. Before 2001, a 10% levy was paid on bets at an off-course bookmaker (but none at a racecourse) and this could be paid "before" or "after" i.e. on the stake or the winnings, the proceeds going to the
Horserace Totalisator Board. Many would advise you, as a
tipster, to "pay the tax before" since it is a smaller amount, but mathematically it works out the same since arithmetical
multiplication is
commutative. This tax was abolished with the general reform of the gambling acts.
Licensed premises (pubs) Until the Gambling Act 2005, the
Betting Gaming and Lotteries Act 1963 prohibited "betting and the passing of betting slips" in licensed premises, that is those licensed to sell alcohol. Six specific games,
Pool,
Cribbage,
Darts,
Bar billiards,
Shove-halfpenny and
Dominoes could be "played for small stakes on those parts of the premises open to the public". A notice to the effect had to be posted in a prominent place. It is legal to place bets via mobile phones from a pub, even through the pub's wi-fi connection, but only for oneself, not for another. It is also legal for publicans to have pools coupons or other slips available, but not to take the bets themselves. Passing on a bet on behalf of another, in any capacity, is generally considered by law to be acting as an agent and would require a licence. ==Syndicates==