
Context
Tim Miller has confirmed his exit from the Gambling Commission after spending ten years at the regulatory body, during which he has played a central role in steering major policy initiatives. Miller's tenure has coincided with one of the most transformative periods in UK gambling regulation, encompassing the comprehensive Gambling Act review, the rollout of financial vulnerability assessment protocols, and the investigation of market integrity breaches including the recent election betting scandal.
As a senior leader at the Commission, Miller has been instrumental in translating political directives and public concern into regulatory frameworks. His departure comes at a time when the regulator faces mounting pressure to balance consumer protection with operator viability, and as the implementation of the Gambling Act review enters critical phases.
What This Means
Miller's departure introduces potential turbulence in the regulatory landscape. A decade-long tenure suggests deep institutional knowledge, established relationships with industry stakeholders, and a coherent vision for the regulator's strategic direction. The loss of this continuity may result in shifts in regulatory philosophy, priority sequencing, and enforcement intensity under new leadership.
For operators, compliance professionals, and industry associations, the transition period warrants heightened engagement with the Gambling Commission to ensure that institutional memory and ongoing projects are not disrupted. Key areas of concern include the status of the Gambling Act review, the finalisation of financial vulnerability standards, and the ramp-up of enforcement actions including the ongoing election betting prosecutions.
The incoming leadership will inherit a complex portfolio at a uniquely challenging moment. Whoever steps into Miller's role will face immediate pressure from multiple stakeholder groups — operators seeking regulatory clarity, consumer advocates demanding stronger protections, and political stakeholders monitoring the Gambling Act review outcome. The transition period creates uncertainty that the industry should plan for by maintaining direct regulatory engagement.
What to Watch
Monitor the Gambling Commission's announcement of Miller's successor and any accompanying statements about continuity of ongoing policy projects. Watch for changes in the regulator's communication tone and enforcement priority signals in the months immediately following the leadership transition.
Source: iGaming Business. Published 2026-07-01.
Source: iGaming Business

Illia Lisovskyy
Senior Editor
Member of the iGaming Pulse editorial team. Covering industry news, analysis, and B2B developments across the global iGaming sector.


