Changeflow GovPing Banking & Finance High Court Rejects National Lottery Challenges
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High Court Rejects National Lottery Challenges

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Summary

On 17 April 2026, the High Court rejected in full the claims brought by The New Lottery Company Limited and Northern & Shell PLC against the Gambling Commission regarding the award of the Fourth National Lottery Licence to Allwyn. The court ruled in favour of the Gambling Commission on all claims, rejecting allegations of improper award and impermissible modifications to the Licence arrangements.

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What changed

The High Court rejected legal challenges to the Fourth National Lottery Licence procurement competition, ruling that the Gambling Commission ran a fair and robust competition and that none of the contested changes to the Licence during implementation were substantial or contrary to relevant procurement regulations.

This judgment enables Allwyn, with oversight from the Gambling Commission, to continue with investment plans for The National Lottery without further distraction. The ruling is significant for Good Causes, which have collectively raised over £52 billion since 1994.

Archived snapshot

Apr 17, 2026

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High Court rejects legal challenges relating to the National Lottery

17 April 2026

On 17 April 2026, the High Court rejected in full the claims brought by The New Lottery Company Limited (TNLC) and Northern & Shell PLC (N&S) against the Gambling Commission in relation to the award of the Fourth National Lottery Licence.

In summary, the claims alleged that the Gambling Commission had wrongly awarded the Fourth National Lottery Licence to Allwyn, and that instead, TNLC should have won the competition. The claims also alleged that the Gambling Commission and Allwyn had entered into impermissible modifications to the Licence arrangements following the competition.

The lengthy trial of the claims took place in the High Court before Mrs Justice Joanna Smith between 9 October and 2 December 2025, with an additional day on 13 January 2026.

The High Court has now ruled in favour of the Gambling Commission on all of the claims, rejecting the allegations which had been made.

This is an important judgment for the future of The National Lottery that we welcome. This judgment makes clear that the Gambling Commission ran a fair and robust competition to award the Fourth National Lottery Licence, and that none of the contested changes to the Licence, in the course of its implementation, were substantial or contrary to the relevant procurement regulations.

The judgment gives resounding support to Good Causes by enabling Allwyn, with oversight from the Commission, to continue with their plans of investment in The National Lottery without further distraction. Our priority remains to continue regulating The National Lottery for the benefit of participants and Good Causes.

The National Lottery is one of the world’s largest lotteries and since launching in 1994, National Lottery players have collectively raised more than £52 billion for more than 670,000 Good Causes across the UK, transforming lives and contributing to the arts, sport, heritage and communities.

We do not intend to comment further at this stage.

Last updated: 17 April 2026

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
UKGC
Published
April 17th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
[2026] EWHC (KB)

Who this affects

Applies to
Lottery operators
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Lottery licensing Public procurement
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Gambling
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Antitrust & Competition Government Contracting

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