In the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, a betting shop is a shop away from a racecourse ("off-course") where one can legally place bets in person with a licensed bookmaker. Most shops are part of chains, including William Hill, Ladbrokes, or Coral. In Australia and New Zealand, they are operated by totalisator agencies. In the United States ever since the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 was overturned, brands like DraftKings, FanDuel and William Hill have a presence. Betting shops include America's Betshop and Betfred.
It is also illegal to allow children under 18 into a betting shop. A 2009 investigation determined that 98 out of 100 betting shops visited would allow children to place a bet.
Most betting shops now offer free tea and coffee to attract gambler. They usually have large televisions covering all the events, like an American sports bar. Until 1986, they were not allowed to have live broadcast coverage, but the bookmaker often had a small portable television or transistor radio hidden behind the counter. Because punters could not see or hear live coverage, some bookmakers deceived punters by claiming a different result from the actual one or otherwise altered the declared starting price.
That changed in 1986, and Satellite Information Services was formed to screen live races to betting shops. Greyhound races are timed to the second on the feed pictures ever since a scam that intercepted and slightly delayed the broadcast feed for greyhound races, which typically last less than two minutes. By delaying the feed slightly, an accomplice on-course who had already seen the result could communicate by telephone with one in a betting shop off-course, who would bet on a racing certainty.
The larger chains also operate at sports grounds, where bets are placed using pre-printed betting slips. Winnings from bets placed at these facilities can then usually be collected on site, by post or from one of the high street branches.
A £2 stake limit was introduced for fixed odds betting terminals in the United Kingdom in 2019. Some gambling companies warned that their profitability could be impacted by tens of millions of pounds per year, and that jobs could be lost in betting shops. The culture secretary explained that the government was attempting to help "hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people who lose thousands of pounds on these machines".
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