How old do you have to be to buy a lottery ticket in the UK? Still 16 or did they change it?
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Quick question - I'm trying to settle an argument with my mate. How old do you have to be to buy a lottery ticket in the UK these days? I swear it used to be 16 but someone told me they changed it recently?
Also wondering about scratch cards - is the age limit the same for those? Cheers!
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They changed it mate! Used to be 16 but it's 18 now across the board. The change happened in April 2021 - part of the government's crackdown on underage gambling. Same goes for scratch cards too.
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@betting_pro is spot on. The Gambling Act changes brought lottery tickets and scratch cards in line with other gambling activities. How old to buy a lottery ticket UK is now definitively 18, no exceptions.
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Interesting timing on the age change. If you look at the statistics, the probability of developing gambling problems follows roughly P(problem) = α × (age_start)^(-β) × (exposure_time)^γ where α ≈ 0.23, β ≈ 1.7, and γ ≈ 0.45. Basically, starting younger dramatically increases risk - hence the policy shift to 18.
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Makes sense from a protection standpoint, though I do remember buying my first scratch card at 16! Felt so grown up. How old to buy a scratch card UK being raised to 18 probably saves a lot of pocket money.
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@sarah_g Same here! Though looking back, starting that young probably wasn't the best idea. Now I'm dropping £500+ monthly on Bet365 slots. The age limit should probably be 25 if we're being honest about brain development!
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The irony is that kids can still play those arcade 2p machines at the seaside but can't buy a £1 scratch card. The whole system's a bit bonkers if you ask me.
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Here's how the age limits compare across different activities:
Activity Age Limit Changed Lottery tickets 18 April 2021 Scratch cards 18 April 2021 Casino gambling 18 No change Sports betting 18 No change Private betting 18 No change Arcade machines 16 No change Basically everything 'proper' gambling is now 18.
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@tom_slots You're not wrong about the seaside machines! Though to be fair, there's a massive difference between losing 50p in penny falls and potentially winning millions on the lottery. The psychological impact is completely different.
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What really gets me is how they implemented it. Shops had to retrain staff, update tills, change signage... Must have cost retailers millions. All for what amounts to a two-year age bump that probably affects a tiny percentage of sales.
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The retailers were NOT happy about this change. Friend of mine runs a corner shop and says lottery sales dropped noticeably after the change. Turns out quite a few 16-17 year olds were regular customers.
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Good riddance to underage lottery sales, I say. Seen too many young lads blow their wages on William Hill terminals. At least this keeps them away from the gateway stuff for a bit longer.
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@slotqueen_uk Bit dramatic calling lottery tickets 'gateway' gambling! Most people who buy the odd scratch card never progress to anything serious. It's like saying beer leads to heroin addiction.
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Cheers for all the replies! Settled the argument - my mate owes me a pint. Still can't believe I missed when they changed it. Shows how much attention I pay to the news!
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The philosophical question is whether we're actually protecting young people or just creating an artificial barrier that makes gambling more appealing as 'forbidden fruit'. Human nature suggests the latter, unfortunately.
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What's mental is that kids can open trading accounts on apps like Trading 212 at 18 and lose thousands on volatile stocks, but we're worried about them buying lottery tickets. The inconsistency in financial protection is laughable.
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Anyone know if there were any challenges to this law change? Seems like it would impact business revenue significantly enough that someone would have fought it through the courts.
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@jackpot_jane The retailers association grumbled but nothing serious legally. Hard to argue against 'protecting children' in court, even if the protection is arguably minimal. Political suicide to oppose it really.
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Still find it weird that you can get married, join the army, and vote at 16-18 but can't buy a £2 Lucky Dip. British logic at its finest - protect them from themselves while sending them to war zones!