Context
Since 2019, UK research councils have provided approximately £2 million in funding awards for gambling research, with grants being awarded from disciplines across most of UKRI’s remit areas.
A lack of research interest combined with the relatively low status of gambling as a research field, particularly when put alongside other health and public health areas, has resulted in a small number of researchers accounting for many domestic studies on gambling.
The introduction of the Gambling Levy in April 2025 provides an opportunity to grow the research base significantly.
UKRI is developing a research agenda as part of its Research Programme on Gambling that will draw from multiple disciplines.
For more information on the background of this funding opportunity, go to the Additional information section.
Scope
Following the introduction of the new statutory levy on gambling operators, UKRI is establishing a bespoke Research Programme on Gambling, funded under the research strand of the levy.
As a part of this, UKRI is commissioning a series of RER to help identify evidence gaps within the research and innovation ecosystem relating to gambling harms. The RER will help to inform research prioritisation and policy development.
Within the field of gambling harms, it is recognised that there are several key areas in which the evidence base needs to be strengthened and the diversity of disciplines involved in gambling research can also be expanded to include interdisciplinary and multi.
RER will help to identify these areas to inform research prioritisation and policy development.
Aim
RER are a streamlined approach to reviewing existing research evidence in this context of gambling harms.
RER will support a step change in the high quality, independent research available on gambling harms and will help identify evidence gaps within the research and innovation ecosystem relating to gambling harms.
Once published, the RER will form an integral part of the early stages of UKRI’s Research Programme on Gambling, including the Gambling Harms Research Coordination Centre.
Gambling harms research and innovation partnerships (GHRIPs) will be expected to incorporate the outputs from relevant RER into their phase two workplans.
Our indicative research themes deliberately broaden and reframe the field. They respond to the public consultation and are not constrained by prior funding structures or frameworks. UKRI is establishing the foundations for a trusted, independent, and inclusive research ecosystem, one capable of delivering credible, policy-relevant insight for the long term.
Duration
The duration of this award is six months.
Projects must start by 1 November 2025.
Funding available
The full economic cost (FEC) of your project can be up to £50,000.
UKRI will fund 100% of the FEC.
What we will fund
Thematic areas
The following areas are intended as guidance on possible thematic areas for RER. This is not intended to be a comprehensive or exhaustive list. We welcome any applications from areas where there is a clear case presented for a strengthened evidence base or disciplines, or both.
Unlicensed gambling and crime
This area includes:
- impact of gambling with unlicensed operators
- size and shape of the unlicensed market (online and land-based)
- motivations or pathways to use unlicensed market
- crypto gambling
- consumer awareness of unlicensed market
- gateway products and link to early gambling behaviours
Marketing and advertising
This area includes:
- social media advertising (extent, impact, children and young people, influencers, streaming, artificial intelligence (AI))
- personalised ads and targeting
- different types of ads and impact on gambling behaviour, including sponsorship
- evaluation of marketing restrictions
- links between marketing and harm
- safer gambling messaging
- marketing and self-exclusion
- design of visual storytelling, particularly with vulnerable groups
Vulnerabilities, harm, severe and adverse consequences of gambling
This area includes:
- factors leading to riskier or more harmful gambling (spatial, temporal, mental health, neurodiversity, gender, ethnic communities, age, family, societal, environmental)
- gaps in underpinning neurobiological basis of gambling disorders
- gaps in evidence to support identification of effective clinical interventions or opportunities to pursue to feed into treatment strand, for example transdiagnostic approaches, neuromodulation, digital
- long-term gambling harms
- pathways to, and predictors of, risky or harmful gambling
- evaluate the effectiveness and design of harm prevention measures (interactions, safer gambling messaging, education)
- develop markers of harm or measurement tools to capture harms objectively
Gateway products or activities, early gambling behaviour, product characteristics
This area includes:
- prize draws
- how design can identify and support mechanisms that create addictive behaviours
- product characteristics or design and risk or harm, patterns of consumption
- interplay between vulnerabilities and product characteristics
- normalisation of gambling
- product or product characteristics risk profiles
- longitudinal research into early gambling behaviours or pathways to harm
Customer interaction or gambling management tools
This area includes:
- variances in customer interactions and their effectiveness
- effectiveness and usage of protection measures such as GAMSTOP, SENSE and GamProtect
- effectiveness of self-exclusion (online, land based, link to unlicensed market)
- attitudes and behaviours of self-excluded people who gamble
- policy design
Social impact of gambling
This area includes:
- effect of gambling on others
- positive impact of gambling
- normalisation, gamification and digital wellbeing
International benchmarking
This area includes:
- variation of gambling harms across different countries and regulatory frameworks
- public health implications of cross border online gambling
- cultural attitudes towards the perception and reporting of gambling harms
- national policies on gambling advertising and effect on international audiences
- internationalisation of online gambling platforms
- digital payment systems and cross-border gambling and harm prevention
- economic costs of gambling harms in low and middle-income countries compared to high-income countries
- methodological challenges in measuring gambling harms across different cultural and legal contexts
Data
This area includes:
- use of real-time behavioural data from online gambling platforms
- ethical implications of collecting and using player data
- effectiveness of data-driven nudges
- barriers and enablers for international data sharing for gambling harm research
- role of open data initiatives
- identification of data sources to understand disordered gambling and gambling harms
- availability of data which allows insight into vulnerable and minoritised groups
AI
This area includes:
- AI-driven interventions and their efficacy
- personalisation and player profiling
- algorithmic bias in AI systems
- regulatory and policy implications
- human-AI collaboration
Costings
You can request funding for costs such as:
- a contribution to the salary of the project lead and co-leads
- salary costs for other posts such as research and technical staff
- travel costs
- data preservation, data sharing and dissemination costs
- evidence synthesis and secondary data analysis
- knowledge synthesis and dissemination
- estates and indirect costs
- professional enabling staff where they are providing project specific support that goes beyond activities included in estates and indirect costs
You can also request costs for work to be undertaken at international organisations by international project co-leads.
We will fund 100% of the eligible costs.
Complimentary funding
We are also commissioning GHRIPs which will include the following themes.
You should be mindful of how your RER will compliment these proposed themes and support the wider programme.
Intersectionality
How overlapping identities (for example, race, gender, disability) shape gambling experiences and harms.
This can also include experiences and drivers of gambling-related harms and help-seeking in marginalised communities. For example, those who may face higher risks of gambling harm but are under-represented in research and support services.
Structural drivers
The role of the systemic, commercial, environmental, and institutional factors that create conditions for harmful gambling behaviours including culture, demography, deprivation, housing, urban or rural development, and digital inequality in gambling behaviour, risk, and experience of gambling harms or both.
Direct or lived experience
Individual risk factors, for example, mental health conditions, neurodivergence, trauma, financial precarity, housing insecurity, and community-led research into gambling.
Digital gambling ecosystems
The impact of:
- personalisation and targeted advertising
- new and changing marketing practices
- access to multiple online gambling accounts
- loot boxes
- cryptocurrency-based esports
- algorithmic design on users, including vulnerable users such as children and adolescents
Preventive, protective and recovery factors
Most research focuses on harm, not resilience, recovery, or preventative practices by a range of factors, whether:
- at the local community level
- to healthcare and educational environments
- to gambling firms and online platforms
Co-occurring issues
Including mental health, substance use, and financial hardship, as well as potential integrated treatment models.
You should also consider the impact of financial harms.
Trusted research and innovation (TR&I)
UKRI is committed in ensuring that effective international collaboration in research and innovation takes place with integrity and within strong ethical frameworks.
TR&I is a UKRI work programme. It is designed to help protect all those working in our thriving and collaborative international sector by enabling partnerships to be as open as possible, and as secure as necessary.
Our TR&I principles set out UKRI’s expectations of organisations funded by UKRI in relation to due diligence for international collaboration.
As such, applicants for UKRI funding may be asked to demonstrate how their proposed projects will comply with our approach and expectation towards TR&I. You should identify potential risks and the relevant controls you will put in place to help proportionately reduce these risks.
Further guidance and information about TR&I, including where you can find additional support.