The UKGC is using merged insights from gambling experiences from GSGB respondents, aiming to provide a deeper understanding of the human cost of gambling harms
The UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) has published new insights uncovered by the new research methodology of the Gambling Survey for Great Britain (GSGB).
The insights are provided on follow-up interviews conducted with GSGB participants to offer a deeper understanding of the adverse and lived consequences of gambling.
Initiated in 2023, the GSGB leads the Commission’s academic objective to uncover first-of-a-kind research and data as the largest survey on gambling trends and behaviours conducted by a regulatory authority, with 20,000 respondents.
Research was conducted by NatCen on a subset of 25 GSGB participants, who indicated that they had experienced severe or adverse consequences from their own gambling in the past 12 months.
The Commission seeks to understand the journeys of the individuals and their unique experiences to gambling harms and to uncover interconnections between different consequences whether positive or negative for the individual. Researchers underline the importance of subset insights to fill in potential gaps in the wider research of the GSGB methodology.
All 25 participants had gambled in the past 12-months and experienced a severe consequence of their own gambling. The UKGC notes that all participants had a PGSI score above three.
The study aimed to explore the lived experiences of individuals to understand the pathways to gambling harm, the external influences that shape it, and the interrelation of different types of consequences. Researchers emphasised the role of in-depth qualitative accounts in supplementing and enhancing the broader statistical findings of the GSGB.
Interlocking Harms
The Gambling Commission’s latest qualitative research paints a bleak but illuminating picture of lives unravelled by gambling. The stories of the 25 individuals interviewed — each of whom had experienced severe consequences in the past year — suggest that gambling-related harm rarely follows a straight line.
Rather, it emerges at the intersection of personal history, social context and economic stress, manifesting in overlapping and mutually reinforcing ways.
For some, gambling began early — shaped by the habits of family members or a culture of casual betting. Initial encounters were often benign, even pleasurable. Participants recalled the thrill of winning and the social intimacy of shared outings, such as bingo nights.
But these moments were, in most cases, precursors to decline. Financial problems were the most commonly reported entry point into harm.
“What began as minor belt-tightening often progressed to missed mortgage payments, debt spirals, and in several instances, homelessness. “I lost everything,” one woman in her 40s explained. “I lost my house, I lost my job, so I was homeless on the streets.”
The economic distress frequently bled into strained relationships. Secrecy, guilt and conflict proved corrosive. A man in his thirties described how arguments over unpaid bills precipitated a break-up:
“The arguments were really intense… we split.” For others, the burden weighed most heavily on the mind. Respondents reported anxiety, insomnia, suicidal ideation and disordered eating. “I just find it difficult to even eat because I’m thinking about what I’ve done,” one man confessed.
Stakeholders must accept that gambling harms do not occur in isolation. The research underscores how financial stress could trigger emotional turmoil, which in turn undermined relationships, thereby deepening isolation and worsening outcomes. In many cases, the feedback loops became self-reinforcing and difficult to escape.
A better platform for Future Research
The Commission makes clear recommendations, to prioritize early Interventions, before the harms become entrenched. Most participants reported financial or relational stress before other symptoms emerged, offering a window of opportunity for preventative action.
Awareness of support services, however, was uneven. Some had used self-exclusion tools or relied on friends and family, while others were unaware help existed at all. Public messaging and operator responsibility remain critical areas for improvement.
Tailored support is essential as lived journeys differ widely, influenced by employment, family life, mental health, and social environment. A one-size-fits-all approach is unlikely to succeed. The report also stresses the need for further study. Transitions such as job loss, retirement or family change may heighten vulnerability to gambling harm and deserve closer scrutiny.
Quantitative tracking could help untangle the chronology of harm, but qualitative work—especially when conducted with the input of those with lived experience—will be indispensable for capturing the nuance. The Commission’s collaboration with its Lived Experience Advisory Panel (LEAP) helped ensure the current study was both ethically sound and grounded in reality.
The Commission believes that its research is constructive: gambling harm is not merely a function of individual irresponsibility, but a complex social and economic interplay. Understanding its consequences (negative and positive) requires attention to the interdependencies that shape people’s lives and the systems that fail them when the stakes become too high.