MIÉ 27 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2024 - 18:33hs.
Impact on bookmakers advertising

UK bans gambling ads featuring celebrities, sports stars and influencers

In Great Britain, gambling ads featuring celebrities, sports stars and influencers will be banned in order to protect those under 18, one of the biggest groups most targeted by betting markets in the world. Tightening the rules is part of the Advertising Standards Authority's (ASA) commitment to 'safeguarding young people and vulnerable audiences,' the regulator states this Tuesday (5).

The UK’s Committee for Advertising Practice (CAP) has issued new rules for gambling ads, banning anything of “strong appeal” to under-18s, including the use of top footballers and celebrities. The rules will be added to the CAP Code, which all marketing communications must abide by, from 1 October.

Previously the rules stated that advertisements must not be of “particular appeal” to children or young persons. Under this definition, an ad could be banned if the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) judged that it appealed more to people under 18 than to adults. However, the rules have been changed to now also ban ads that have a “strong appeal” to young people.

Marketing communications / advertisements for gambling must not […] be likely to be of strong appeal to children or young persons, especially by reflecting or being associated with youth culture,” the new code says.

This means that any ad that could be considered popular with young people may be banned, even if it is also popular with adults.

In particular, the CAP said that this means operators may no longer use “top-flight footballers and footballers with a considerable following among under-18 on social media”, or “sportspeople well-known to under-18s” in their ads.

In addition, “references to video game content and gameplay popular with under-18s” will also be banned.

The CAP did note, however, that sports – particularly football – and eSports could be said to have a strong appeal to children given “high rates of participation and engagement among under-18s”, and that a stricter reading of the rule could ban all marketing of betting on these sports.

As a result, it added that “this rule does not prevent the advertising of gambling products associated with activities that are themselves of strong appeal to under-18s (for instance, certain sports or playing video games)”.

Also unable to appear in ads are “stars from reality shows popular with under-18s”, with the CAP highlighting Love Island as an example.

The days of gambling ads featuring sports stars, video game imagery and other content of strong appeal to under-18s are numbered. By ending these practices, our new rules invite a new era for gambling ads, more particular to the adult audience they can target and more befitting of the age-restricted product they’re promoting,” CAP director Shahriar Coupal said.

The new rules follows a consultation on how to ensure minors are protected from the effects of gambling advertising, which itself followed a report by GambleAware on the subject. This consultation drew 27 responses, with some calling for much stronger rules, including an outright ban on gambling ads.

The BGC added that the key change from existing rules would be around the use of sports and particularly sports personalities in gambling ads. The ban on the use of major sporting personalities, it said, would be “a step too far”.

Betting is intrinsically linked to sports, sports have a universal global appeal,” the BGC said. “Any restriction on the use of a sports personality under the proposed strong appeal test would therefore have a huge impact on gambling operators. The current particular appeal test and supporting guidance could continue to be effective in restricting advertising content. Restricting the consideration of appeal to solely an under 18 audience, with no reference to the same content’s appeal to an adult audience (as proposed in the strong appeal test), is a step too far."

We perceive this lack of proportionality exists as: (a) it cannot be stated with certainty that the appeal of a particularly sports personality to a child or young person will affect their view of gambling; and (b) there are many ways in which ads can be targeted at audiences very effectively, but which may not qualify for the age-verification exemption given it’s ‘highly robust’ metrics.

Source: iGB