The UK Gambling Commission has extended the rollout date for the second phase of updates to consumer deposit limit tools, moving the deadline from 30 June 2026 to 30 September 2026, and operators now have extra months to complete the necessary technical work before the rules take effect across licensed remote gambling platforms. This adjustment stems directly from feedback gathered during the consultation process, where industry participants highlighted the time required for system modifications and integration testing, while the commission reviewed those comments and determined that a three-month extension would allow proper implementation without compromising the intended consumer protections.Starting 30 September 2026 licensed remote operators must provide gross deposit limits that carry the specific label “deposit limits” and appear with at least equal prominence alongside any other limit options offered to customers, and the rules also tighten the permitted time frames that operators can set for those limits to ensure consistency across the market.
These changes form part of broader revisions to the Remote Technical Standards that govern how online gambling systems function, and the commission has made clear that the core objective remains giving players clearer tools to manage their spending while operators maintain the flexibility to design user-friendly interfaces.Stakeholder responses pointed to ongoing development work needed for software updates, testing cycles, and compliance checks, and the commission accepted that rushing those steps could introduce errors that affect both operators and players, so the later date gives everyone involved a realistic window to finish the job properly.
The original June 2026 target had been set after an earlier consultation round, yet subsequent input showed that many firms needed additional calendar time, and regulators responded by shifting the date rather than altering the substance of the requirements themselves.
From the new September deadline onward, every licensed remote gambling operator will need to display the gross deposit limit option using the exact wording “deposit limits,” ensure that this choice sits at the same visual level as other limit types, and apply the revised time-frame parameters that the standards now specify, while existing systems that already meet earlier phases of the rules will require targeted upgrades to reach full compliance.
Those who have studied the consultation documents note that the commission linked the announcement to both the news release and the full consultation response, giving operators a single reference point for the technical specifications they must follow.The extension keeps the overall direction of travel unchanged, yet it recognises practical constraints that surfaced during planning, and operators have until the end of September 2026 to complete their preparations, after which the commission will expect full adherence across all remote platforms they regulate.
Firms that begin work early can use the extra quarter to run pilot versions, gather player feedback on the new display format, and iron out any integration issues with existing account-management tools, whereas those who delay risk falling behind once the September date arrives.The decision to move the implementation date demonstrates how the commission balances consumer-protection goals with operational realities, and the three-month shift provides a clear, fixed target that the entire remote gambling sector can now work toward without further changes to the underlying requirements.
Operators and software providers now have a defined period in which to finalise their deposit-limit systems, and the commission has published the necessary guidance so that everyone understands what must be in place by 30 September 2026.