Done Brothers (Cash Betting) Limited, known as Betfred, must pay £825,000 after regulators found shortcomings in the company’s oversight of anti-money laundering processes and safer gambling safeguards within its betting shops. The Gambling Commission’s review centered on the operator’s B3 gaming machines, which generate significant footfall and revenue across its retail estate.

According to the Commission, Betfred did not have effective systems in place to evaluate broader customer behavior on these machines. While the business relied on machine alerts and daily activity reports, the checks in place during 2024 did not allow staff to gauge a customer’s overall level of play or assess potential money laundering or terrorist financing risks. Regulators highlighted that the operator lacked a suitable policy for identifying individuals who may be subject to financial sanctions.

Thresholds used to trigger financial risk checks were also flagged as faulty. The Commission noted that Betfred initiated source-of-income inquiries at £15,000 in customer losses or £125,000 in stakes over a 365-day span, levels deemed too high and insufficiently aligned with risk.

Concerns Over Customer Protection and Interaction Quality

Alongside anti-money laundering concerns, the assessment found gaps in the company’s safer gambling approach. The Commission reported that Betfred “could not adequately identify spend and any associated financial indicators of gambling harm for customers using B3 gaming machines.” In some cases, interactions either did not occur when they should have or were not carried out in a way that reduced the possibility of gambling-related harm. Officials also determined that staff did not consistently assess how effective these interactions were.

In its ruling, the Commission emphasized that the shortcomings were largely procedural rather than tied to specific customer cases. John Pierce, the Commission’s Director of Enforcement, stated: “While the failings identified during the 2024 Compliance Assessment were predominantly technical breaches rather than arising from specific customer examples, they were nevertheless unacceptable, particularly with thresholds appearing too high and insufficiently risk based when assessed in practice, and deficiencies in some processes and procedures adopted by the Licensee.

We fully acknowledge the improvements the operator has already made since these issues were identified, and the independent audit will be key to confirming these changes are sustained so that the operator continues to be fully compliant with social responsibility and anti-money laundering requirements.”

Regulatory History and Company Response

This is not the first time Betfred has been penalized for similar issues in the United Kingdom. The operator paid a £3.25 million settlement in 2023 stemming from unrelated failings in both social responsibility and anti-money laundering procedures. The latest ruling again requires the company to undergo a third-party audit and includes a formal warning.

Betfred said it cooperated throughout the review. The company’s head of corporate affairs and communications, Mark Pearson, addressed the findings by saying: “Following a review of our UK-based betting shops by the Gambling Commission we have further strengthened our anti-money laundering and social responsibility policies. During the review, the commission found no evidence of criminal spend in our shops. Betfred is committed to ensuring a safe gambling experience for all our customers.”

The Commission stressed that, despite improvements already underway, sustained adherence to regulatory expectations will be essential as Betfred works to fully align its shop operations with required standards.