BHA warns of severe financial hit after Gambling Commission confirms affordability checks
The British Horseracing Authority (BHA) is warning of "severe financial implications" for the racing industry after the Gambling Commission confirmed it will implement Financial Risk Assessments. The
The British Horseracing Authority is "hugely disappointed" after the Gambling Commission confirmed that Financial Risk Assessments will be implemented
Read Full Story at Sky Sports โWhy This Matters
The British Horseracing Authorityโs warning underscores a critical tension between regulatory compliance and commercial viability, raising broader questions about how gambling-adjacent industries must adapt to mounting scrutiny. For a sport deeply reliant on betting revenue, these financial risk assessments could reshape its economic foundation, potentially accelerating consolidation among smaller operators or altering the balance of power between bookmakers and racecourses.
Background Context
The Gambling Commissionโs move follows years of incremental tightening of financial checks across the sector, but the racing industry has long operated in a regulatory gray area compared to traditional gambling businesses. Historically, horseracingโs financial health has been tied to betting, yet its governance structures lag behind those of betting operators, leaving it vulnerable to sudden policy shifts that treat it as a peripheral player in the gambling ecosystem.
What Happens Next
The BHAโs warning suggests imminent lobbying efforts to either delay implementation or secure exemptions, but the Gambling Commissionโs track record implies limited flexibility. Racecourses and smaller trainers may face immediate liquidity strains, while larger stakeholders could exploit the changes to expand their market share, potentially triggering a wave of mergers or closures in the coming 12โ18 months.
Bigger Picture
This development reflects a wider crackdown on gambling-adjacent sectors, where regulators are increasingly viewing indirect financial tiesโlike sponsorships or revenue-sharing modelsโas compliance risks. As the UKโs gambling landscape evolves, sports and entertainment industries tied to betting income may need to diversify their revenue streams or risk being collateral damage in a broader regulatory overhaul.

