Ben Fisher 

Premier League, FA, EFL and WSL agree code of conduct over gambling deals

The Premier League, together with the FA, EFL and WSL have released a code of conduct for gambling deals after campaigners accused clubs of milking cash from betting firms
  
  

General view of a Premier League match ball
Eleven Premier League clubs have betting firms as their shirt sponsors. Photograph: Molly Darlington/Reuters

The Premier League, together with the Football Association, English Football League and Women’s Super League, have released a code of conduct for gambling deals, less than 24 hours after campaigners accused top‑flight clubs of milking cash from betting firms before a ban on front‑of‑shirt sponsors is introduced for the 2026-27 season.

The Premier League, alongside the aforementioned stakeholders, say they have drafted a voluntary framework to be implemented before the start of this season. Last year, Premier League clubs agreed to withdraw betting companies from the front of shirts from the end of the 2025‑26 campaign.

Bournemouth announced on Tuesday a “record-breaking” deal with the Asian betting firm bj88, taking to 11 the number of top-flight clubs to confirm a gambling company as their primary shirt sponsor for the coming campaign – up from eight last season. Crystal Palace and Wolves have returned to having betting firms as their shirt sponsors after deals with non‑gambling businesses.

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The authorities list four key principles behind their approach – protection, social responsibility, reinvestment and integrity – but say the main aim is to ensure gambling sponsorships are responsible and “limit the reach to children and those at risk of gambling-related harm”.

The code says competitions and clubs should only enter into agreements with a gambling company licensed by the Gambling Commission or part of a “white-label partnership”. It adds that areas of a stadium designated for the exclusive use of families should not display gambling sponsorship logos. The Big Step, a charity dedicated to removing gambling advertising in football, said clubs continue “to blindly sign these desperate deals for a few extra quid”.

The longstanding principal sponsor of the EFL’s three divisions – the Championship, League One and League Two – is SkyBet, who first partnered with the league in 2013-14. The EFL says the partnership is “built around safer gambling, including a memorandum of understanding that sets out how to deliver joint objectives in a socially responsible way”.

 

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