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Whose Interests Do Tipsters Truly Serve?

April 27, 2026
in Social Science
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Whose Interests Do Tipsters Truly Serve? — Social Science

Whose Interests Do Tipsters Truly Serve?

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A recent comprehensive study led jointly by Miguel Hernández University of Elche (UMH) and the University of Vigo in Spain has uncovered compelling evidence linking adolescents’ active engagement with tipsters—social media figures offering betting advice—to significantly elevated gambling-related risks. This research advances our understanding of how digital gambling cultures, particularly through influencer dynamics, shape young users’ attitudes and behaviors around betting.

The investigation, published in the Journal of Gambling Studies, rigorously surveyed 782 secondary school and vocational students averaging 15.8 years old. Participants were segmented into three distinct groups: those completely unfamiliar with tipsters, those aware yet not following them, and those who actively engaged with tipsters’ content on social media, messaging platforms, and specialized forums. The research design focused on delineating the differential psychological and behavioral impacts across these groups to illuminate tipsters’ role in adolescent gambling vulnerability.

Notably, the results delineate a clear and concerning gradient in gambling intention, frequency, and severity. Adolescents who actively followed tipsters exhibited markedly higher propensities to plan, initiate, and repeatedly engage in betting activities. These adolescents also demonstrated psychosocial profiles characterized by diminished perception of gambling risk alongside heightened normative perceptions—essentially, an increased belief that gambling is a widespread and socially normative behavior. Additionally, their gambling motivations skewed heavily toward financial gain, underscoring a potentially dangerous allure of profit in their betting rationale.

This distinction carries considerable weight because mere awareness of tipsters did not produce comparable risk elevations. The pivotal determinant of vulnerability appeared to be the active following or consumption of tipster-generated content. This suggests that passive exposure or simple recognition of tipster existence is insufficient to provoke the cognitive and behavioral shifts associated with problem gambling tendencies. Rather, the intimacy and repeated engagement with these figures’ narratives significantly amplify risk.

Tipsters occupy unique and influential niches within digital ecosystems, working across social platforms known for shaping youth culture—such as Instagram, TikTok, and messaging apps—and embedding their betting narratives within sports-related content and influencer culture. Their messaging typically glamorizes betting outcomes by highlighting winning bets while minimizing or omitting losses. This selective portrayal promotes a cognitive distortion known as the illusion of control, wherein individuals overestimate their ability to predict or influence inherently stochastic events, a well-documented cognitive bias linked to pathological gambling.

Professor Daniel Lloret Irles from UMH, who co-led the study, emphasized that tipsters function as more than mere information conduits; they are powerful cultural amplifiers. “Tipsters do not just provide betting predictions—they embody and project an entire lifestyle that normalizes and encourages gambling as a routine and socially endorsed activity,” he explained. Through this cultural embedding, tipsters play a crucial role in shaping normative climates and reinforcing behavioral scripts conducive to gambling initiation and escalation.

Gender differences also emerged with significance in the study’s findings. Male adolescents reported higher gambling intentions and frequency compared to females, consistent with existing literature on gendered patterns in gambling. The researchers propose a sociocultural convergence between tipster messaging—often emphasizing control, strategy, and financial success—and male adolescents’ gambling profiles, potentially reinforcing males’ engagement propensity. These gendered dynamics suggest the need for targeted interventions acknowledging how masculinities and digital gambling cultures intersect.

Two principal psychological mechanisms underpin tipsters’ influence on adolescent gambling. The first is normative influence: repeated exposure to tipster content cements beliefs that gambling is both common and socially accepted among peers and wider communities. The second is the illusion of control: tipsters’ selective emphasis on successful bets fosters an erroneous perception of predictability and personal efficacy in betting outcomes, thereby increasing gambling persistence despite losses.

The study also draws attention to substantial regulatory gaps surrounding tipsters’ marketing practices. Many tipsters operate as affiliates or intermediaries funneling adolescents toward commercial betting platforms. Their promotional content frequently lacks transparent advertising disclosures, complicating efforts to regulate online gambling promotion and protect minors. This opacity exacerbates the risks posed by tipsters, as adolescents may not critically appraise the commercial motives underpinning the content they consume.

Given these insights, the researchers advocate for a multifaceted approach to mitigate tipsters’ adverse impact on adolescent gambling vulnerability. Foremost among recommendations is the strengthening of regulatory frameworks governing affiliate marketing and gambling-related content on social media platforms. Transparency mandates regarding commercial intent and verified success rates could help counter misleading narratives. Furthermore, preventative strategies should incorporate media literacy programming explicitly designed for youth, families, and educators to enhance awareness of persuasive gambling marketing tactics, especially those exploiting cognitive biases like the illusion of control.

Importantly, the research highlights that exposure to tipsters may serve as an early indicator of increased gambling risk well before adolescents engage in actual betting behavior. This early marker status underscores the necessity for timely educational interventions and policy reforms to prevent gambling-related harms from developing at critical developmental stages.

In synthesizing these findings, it becomes apparent that the digital transformation of gambling marketing, embodied by tipsters, demands urgent attention from researchers, policymakers, and public health advocates. The entwining of sports fandom, influencer culture, and gambling promotion constructs a potent milieu wherein adolescents are highly vulnerable to distorted beliefs and risky betting behaviors. Addressing this challenge requires collaborative efforts to foster safer online environments and equip young individuals with the critical tools to navigate and resist persuasive gambling content.

This groundbreaking study thus represents a crucial contribution to the field of gambling research, offering robust evidence that should catalyze reform across regulatory, educational, and public health domains. As adolescent gambling remains a growing global concern, understanding and mitigating the influence of tipsters is essential to safeguarding youth well-being in increasingly digitized and commercialized social landscapes.

Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Who do tipsters work for? Tipster exposure and adolescent gambling
News Publication Date: 13-Mar-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10899-026-10487-2
Keywords: Adolescents, Gambling risk, Tipsters, Social media, Normative influence, Illusion of control, Gambling behavior, Media literacy, Affiliate marketing, Cognitive bias, Sports betting, Gender differences

Tags: adolescent gambling risksadolescent risk perceptiondigital gambling behaviorsgambling behavior segmentationgambling frequency among adolescentsgambling intention in youthgambling vulnerability in teenagersinfluence of betting tipstersnormative perceptions of gamblingpsychological impact of tipstersrole of influencers in bettingsocial media gambling culture
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