Flutter Entertainment has officially confirmed that July 31, 2026, will be its final day of trading on the London Stock Exchange, with formal delisting taking effect at 8:00am on August 3.
The news was delivered via a notice to investors this morning, bringing clarity to a process that has been building for several months across the group’s capital markets operations.
Investors were first informed of a review of Flutter’s London listing at the company’s AGM on May 7, as part of the publication of its Q1 2026 financial results.
Flutter officially began trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker FLUT on January 29, 2024, marking a clear strategic pivot toward the United States as its primary capital market.
Since its NYSE debut, Flutter has steadily migrated the majority of its shareholder base to New York, making the London listing increasingly redundant from a practical standpoint.
The world’s largest online betting company cited low trading volumes and mounting regulatory costs in London as the primary reasons for abandoning the secondary listing altogether.
Flutter’s share price has slumped by 50% through the closing period of 2025 and the opening months of 2026, adding further pressure to the group’s strategic decision-making in recent quarters.
The delisting reflects a much broader challenge facing UK capital markets, with more than 400 companies either leaving the London Stock Exchange or shifting their primary listings elsewhere between 2020 and 2026.
London was once home to many of the world’s largest gambling businesses, but the city will no longer host a globally significant gambling PLC of Flutter’s scale following this departure.
Following its first-quarter results, Flutter updated its full-year 2026 guidance to forecast revenue of approximately $18.3bn and adjusted EBITDA of $2.87bn at the midpoint, representing year-on-year growth of 12% and 1% respectively.
The group continues to dominate North American online betting through its FanDuel brand, which remains the cornerstone of its long-term commercial strategy in the United States.
Attention now turns to whether Flutter can reignite FanDuel’s performance under the leadership of newly appointed US CEO Christian Genetski as the business refocuses entirely on its New York listing.

