Entain Faces Fresh Questions in Australia as Ladbrokes Emails Draw Regulatory Attention

Entain is once again under the microscope in Australia, with fresh reports suggesting its Ladbrokes Australia brand is facing questions from regulators over emails sent to inactive betting customers.

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The latest scrutiny comes only days after Ladbrokes and sister brand Neds were pulled into a major compliance issue involving Australia’s national self-exclusion system, BetStop. Now, local media reports indicate the Australian Media and Communications Authority (ACMA) is examining whether Ladbrokes failed to follow rules tied to responsible gambling messaging.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, the regulator is seeking answers about emails sent to dormant users who still had money sitting in their Ladbrokes accounts. The messages reportedly warned customers that inactivity fees could be charged unless they returned to betting activity.

What appears to have triggered concern, however, was not the warning itself — but what was missing from it.

Australian gambling operators are required to include references to BetStop in electronic customer communications. The nationwide self-exclusion platform, launched in 2023, allows Australians to block themselves from licensed betting services and has become a key part of the country’s tightening gambling harm policies.

The alleged omission may sound minor on the surface, but in Australia’s current political and regulatory climate, compliance around responsible gambling measures is under far heavier scrutiny than it was only a few years ago.

BetStop remains a growing pressure point

This is far from the first time Entain’s Australian business has found itself linked to BetStop-related concerns.

Just last week, ACMA announced that Ladbrokes and Neds had entered into a court-enforceable undertaking following an investigation into breaches of self-exclusion rules. The regulator found more than 500 violations connected to customers registered with BetStop.

Entain said at the time that the issues dated back to the early rollout period of the national system and stated that it had worked with ACMA to strengthen its controls and internal processes.

Still, the latest reports risk adding to a growing perception that some of the industry’s largest operators are struggling to keep pace with Australia’s increasingly strict regulatory expectations.

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That pressure is not happening in isolation either. Gambling reform has become one of the country’s most politically charged debates, with campaigners continuing to push for stronger protections and tighter advertising restrictions.

Australia’s gambling crackdown is intensifying

The wider gambling sector is now operating under a level of scrutiny that would have seemed unlikely just a few years ago.

Much of the current debate traces back to the 2022 Murphy Inquiry, a parliamentary report that outlined 31 recommendations aimed at reducing gambling-related harm across Australia. Reform advocates have repeatedly accused the government of moving too slowly on those proposals, while public criticism of gambling advertising and betting partnerships has continued to grow.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese recently agreed to tougher restrictions on gambling advertising, although many campaigners argue the measures still fall short of what was originally recommended.

The changing environment has already started influencing how betting companies operate.

Tabcorp, one of the country’s oldest bookmakers, reportedly moved to limit certain professional gamblers viewed as commercially risky. Meanwhile, Sportsbet recently changed its ambassador policies after backlash surrounding its partnership with AFL umpire Nick Foot, who later stepped away from his officiating role while continuing media work tied to the bookmaker.

For operators like Entain, every compliance issue now carries greater reputational risk than before. Regulators are watching more closely, politicians are under pressure to act tougher on gambling, and public tolerance for mistakes appears to be shrinking.

Whether ACMA takes formal action over the Ladbrokes emails remains unclear. But the latest reports are another reminder that Australia’s gambling industry is entering a far more heavily monitored era — one where even routine customer messaging can quickly become part of a much bigger national conversation.

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Source: sbcnews.co.uk

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