How old do you have to be to buy a scratch card in the UK? Got refused at 17
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Proper embarrassing moment today - went to buy a scratch card at the local shop and got refused. I'm 17 and the shopkeeper said I need to be 18. Is this right? I thought scratch cards were different from proper gambling. My mate said you can buy a scratch card at 16 uk but clearly that's wrong. Anyone know the actual rules about how old to buy a scratch card uk?
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Yeah mate, it's 18 for all National Lottery products including scratch cards. Changed a few years back - used to be 16 but they raised it. Your mate's info is outdated.
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@betting_pro is spot on. The age limit went from 16 to 18 in October 2021. Part of the government's crackdown on underage gambling. How old to buy scratch cards uk is now definitively 18 across the board.
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The probability mathematics behind this age change is fascinating. If we consider the addiction formation rate R = (E × T) / (A² × S), where E is exposure frequency, T is time duration, A is age factor, and S is social support systems, then younger players show exponentially higher risk coefficients. The UKGC's data suggested that P(addiction|age<18) ≈ 0.23 versus P(addiction|age≥18) ≈ 0.09, making the policy change statistically justified.
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@casino_dan Jesus Christ, it's scratch cards not rocket science! Kid just wanted to buy a tenner scratchie and you're throwing equations around like it's quantum physics.
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Thanks for the info everyone. Bit gutted I have to wait another year but I get why they changed it. @sarah_g made me laugh though - proper overkill with the maths!
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The irony is delicious though isn't it? Government raises the age to 'protect' young people, but the second you hit 18 they're perfectly happy to take your money. Like some magical transformation happens overnight.
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Here's a comparison of UK gambling age limits:
Product Previous Age Current Age Changed Scratch Cards 16 18 Oct 2021 National Lottery 16 18 Oct 2021 Casino Games 18 18 No change Sports Betting 18 18 No change Bingo 18 18 No change Private Lotteries 16 16 No change -
@tom_slots exactly! It's like the government saying 'you're too immature to lose £2 on a scratch card but here's a credit card and student loan debt'. The whole thing's a philosophical minefield about when we consider someone capable of making their own poor decisions.
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What gets me is the enforcement is patchy. Some shops are proper strict, others don't even check ID. I've seen kids who look about 14 buying scratch cards no questions asked.
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@mike_bet that's the real problem. Inconsistent enforcement makes the whole age limit pointless. Either enforce it properly or don't have it at all. This half-hearted approach helps nobody.
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The enforcement issue stems from inadequate training and unclear penalties. Shop owners face fines but the amounts vary wildly. Some get £1000 penalties, others get £10000. No wonder they're confused about how seriously to take it.
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Meanwhile teenagers are throwing hundreds at FIFA Ultimate Team packs and CS:GO skins, but scratch cards are somehow the danger. The logic is backwards.
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@vip_player_uk don't get me started on loot boxes. Kid can spend dad's credit card on virtual nonsense but can't buy a physical lottery ticket. Makes perfect sense... if you're living in an alternate reality.
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The age verification for online accounts is even more of a joke. Half these sites accept clearly fake documents. At least shop clerks can actually look at someone and judge their age.
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Been working in retail for 10 years and the scratch card age checks are the most awkward part of the job. Especially when it's clearly someone's 17th birthday and they're with their parents who are encouraging them to buy one.
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The psychological impact of arbitrary age limits fascinates me. We're essentially telling people that the moment they turn 18, they magically develop the cognitive ability to handle gambling responsibly. It's like believing in gambling fairies.
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@newbie_casino on the bright side mate, by the time you turn 18 you'll have saved up more money to lose on scratch cards! Every cloud and all that...
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The enforcement statistics reveal interesting patterns: P(successful_purchase|age<18) = Σ(shop_compliance × ID_check_rate × appearance_factor) where shop compliance varies by region (London: 0.82, Manchester: 0.71, rural areas: 0.45), ID check rates depend on staff training budgets, and appearance factors follow normal distributions with μ=0.6, σ=0.15 for perceived age accuracy. This creates a complex enforcement matrix that explains the inconsistent experiences reported here.
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@livedealer_fan mate you and @casino_dan should start a gambling mathematics blog. The rest of us are just trying to figure out why we can't buy a scratch card but can get married at 16!