Betfair is set to face a landmark High Court trial this week over allegations it failed in its duty of care to a client before his death.
The case centres on Luke Ashton, who died by suicide in April 2021 after gambling extensively with the Flutter Entertainment-owned operator.
Ashton’s widow, Annie, along with other family members, filed the lawsuit against Betfair following his death.
The trial is expected to begin on 4 June and will take approximately three weeks to complete, according to City AM.
The case raises fundamental questions about the obligations online gambling platforms owe to customers who may be experiencing distress.
A coroner’s inquest conducted in 2023 found that Ashton suffered from a gambling addiction, with an increase in his gambling habits observed in the period before his death.
Despite this, Betfair had internally classified Ashton as a low-risk gambler during that period.
The coroner also found that Betfair did not meaningfully interact with Ashton between 2019 and the time of his death.
The Prevention of Future Deaths report that followed raised concerns about player protection tools, automated risk systems and operators’ reliance on regulatory minimums.
The High Court will now examine in a civil setting whether an operator may owe a duty of care when customer behaviour indicates a potential gambling disorder.
The UK Gambling Commission received the coroner’s report after the inquest but decided in 2025 not to take further regulatory action against Betfair.
Annie Ashton subsequently filed a separate judicial review challenge over that decision by the regulator.
Flutter has stated it holds itself to high standards on safer gambling and customer protection, and has expressed condolences to the Ashton family.
The trial arrives during a period of broader tightening of UK gambling oversight, with government reforms introducing online slot stake limits and stronger customer checks.
A statutory levy to fund harms research, prevention and treatment has also been introduced as part of that reform programme.
The Gambling Commission has continued enforcement activity against major operators, with Paddy Power Betfair fined £2 million in December last year over social responsibility issues related to customer service.
The regulator identified problems with the operator’s systems being too slow at detecting potential dangers to customers.
For Betfair, the outcome of this High Court case carries implications far beyond a single customer account, potentially redefining the legal boundary between regulatory compliance and broader operator responsibility.

