Britain’s World Cup 2026 Betting Map: Which Cities Bet the Most?
Manchester generates a forecasted 477 World Cup betting searches per 1,000 residents in June 2026. Norwich, a city of under 150,000 people, sits second at 459 per 1,000. At the other end, Rotherham manages just 226 total World Cup searches per 1,000 across betting and general interest combined.

To find out where World Cup betting interest is highest and lowest across the UK, the gambling and iGaming experts at VIP-Grinders analysed Google Ads search volume data across 80 major towns and cities in England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. All figures are normalised per 1,000 residents using current population data. June 2026 forecasts apply the average search uplift observed during the 2022 FIFA World Cup tournament months.
The results produced genuine surprises. Cities more associated with Roman history and spa tourism than sports betting sit in the top five. Scotland’s two largest cities both outperform most of England. And the birthplace of English football culture, South Yorkshire, clusters near the bottom.
The tournament itself is generating record betting volumes. Industry forecasts paint a clear picture of the scale:
The data below breaks down exactly where that betting interest is concentrated across 80 UK cities.
Key Findings
The following headline findings come from VIP-Grinders’ analysis of World Cup 2026 search data across 80 UK cities. Each finding is expanded with full tables and city-by-city breakdowns in the sections below.
- Manchester crowned Britain's biggest World Cup betting city: A forecasted 288,717 World Cup betting searches in June alone. That breaks down to 9,624 per day, or roughly 401 every single hour throughout the tournament month.
- Norwich punches above its weight at #2: A city of under 150,000 generates 2,251 betting searches per day in June, or around 94 every hour. Per capita, it outperforms London, Birmingham, Liverpool, and every other major English city except Manchester.
- Bath and Guildford crack the top 6: Two cities more associated with heritage tourism and commuter belts than sports betting outperform Leeds, Birmingham, Liverpool, and London on a per-capita basis.
- Scotland's two largest cities both make the top 10: Glasgow (#3) and Edinburgh (#8) reflect Scotland's strong footballing culture and high betting engagement relative to population. Glasgow's 240,326 projected monthly searches put it ahead of much larger English cities on raw volume too.
- London ranks just 13th on combined interest: The UK's largest city generates 24.7 million projected searches in June (over 823,000 per day), but its population of over 9 million dilutes the per-capita score well below mid-sized cities.
- Rotherham sits bottom of all 80 cities: Just 226 total World Cup searches per 1,000 residents. The South Yorkshire cluster of Rotherham, Doncaster, and Barnsley all feature in the bottom 20 despite the region's footballing heritage.
- Cambridge trails far behind Oxford and Reading: A city with a large, transient student population ranks among the least engaged with World Cup betting, generating fewer than four searches per hour around the clock.
These are the headline numbers. The sections below present the full methodology, complete ranking tables for betting interest and total World Cup engagement, and the cities where the tournament barely registers.
How We Measured UK Betting Interest
Search data was collected on 16 June 2026 using Google Ads Keyword Planner, examining monthly search volumes recorded in May 2026 across 80 UK cities in two distinct categories:
- World Cup Betting Interest: Search terms capturing intent to place bets, including queries such as 'World Cup betting odds', 'World Cup odds to win', and 'bet on World Cup final', alongside hundreds of related terms.
- World Cup General Interest: Broader engagement with the tournament, covering fixtures, live streams, results, and general tournament information, including terms such as 'World Cup live stream', 'World Cup final times', and 'England World Cup fixtures'.
To ensure a fair comparison between cities of very different sizes, all scores were normalised per 1,000 residents using current population figures. Locations were ranked independently for each category.
June 2026 forecast figures were projected by applying the average search uplift observed during the 2022 FIFA World Cup tournament months (November and December 2022) versus the pre-tournament baseline (October 2022). Betting searches saw a 758% uplift during tournament months versus the baseline: a multiplier of 8.58x applied to May 2026 volumes. General World Cup queries used a 7.57x multiplier.
Which UK Cities Bet Most on the World Cup 2026?
Ranked by forecasted gambling searches per 1,000 residents in June 2026, Manchester tops the list by a significant margin. Some of the results further down are genuinely surprising.
| # | City | County/Region | Per 1,000 | June Total | Per Week | Per Day | Per Hour |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Manchester | Gtr Manchester | 477 | 288,717 | 66,678 | 9,624 | 401 |
| 2 | Norwich | Norfolk | 459 | 67,525 | 15,595 | 2,251 | 94 |
| 3 | Glasgow | Glasgow City | 362 | 240,326 | 55,503 | 8,011 | 334 |
| 4 | Bath | Somerset | 311 | 30,459 | 7,034 | 1,015 | 42 |
| 5 | Bristol | Bristol | 295 | 148,863 | 34,379 | 4,962 | 207 |
| 6 | Guildford | Surrey | 291 | 23,852 | 5,509 | 795 | 33 |
| 7 | Dundee | Dundee City | 268 | 40,240 | 9,293 | 1,341 | 56 |
| 8 | Edinburgh | City of Edinburgh | 266 | 143,801 | 33,210 | 4,793 | 200 |
| 9 | Plymouth | Devon | 258 | 70,785 | 16,348 | 2,360 | 98 |
| 10 | Belfast | County Antrim | 243 | 86,401 | 19,954 | 2,880 | 120 |
| 11 | Exeter | Devon | 242 | 33,462 | 7,728 | 1,115 | 46 |
| 12 | Reading | Berkshire | 232 | 42,385 | 9,789 | 1,413 | 59 |
| 13 | Oxford | Oxfordshire | 228 | 37,838 | 8,739 | 1,261 | 53 |
| 14 | Huddersfield | West Yorkshire | 227 | 32,690 | 7,550 | 1,090 | 45 |
| 15 | Leeds | West Yorkshire | 226 | 194,680 | 44,961 | 6,489 | 270 |
| 16 | Birmingham | West Midlands | 220 | 264,092 | 60,991 | 8,803 | 367 |
| 17 | Southampton | Hampshire | 211 | 55,427 | 12,801 | 1,848 | 77 |
| 18 | Worcester | Worcestershire | 210 | 22,823 | 5,271 | 761 | 32 |
| 19 | Middlesbrough | North Yorkshire | 201 | 31,403 | 7,252 | 1,047 | 44 |
| 20 | Portsmouth | Hampshire | 202 | 43,501 | 10,046 | 1,450 | 60 |
What the Data Tells Us
Manchester leads with a forecasted 477 gambling searches per 1,000 residents in June: nearly 9x its May baseline. That translates to close to 289,000 projected World Cup betting searches across the month, or roughly 9,624 every single day. Its status as a football city with two Premier League clubs and a deep-rooted betting culture makes it a natural frontrunner, but the volume is still striking when broken down to this level.
Norwich is the standout surprise in second place. A city of under 150,000 people, it generates 459 searches per 1,000: an estimated 2,251 betting searches every day throughout June, or around 94 every single hour. For a city its size, that level of sustained engagement is remarkable.
Glasgow takes third, reflecting Scotland’s strong footballing culture and enthusiasm for international tournaments even when the national side is not involved. Its 240,326 projected monthly searches break down to around 8,011 per day, putting it ahead of much larger English cities on pure volume too. Edinburgh also makes the top 10, underlining Scotland’s status as one of the UK’s most betting-engaged nations relative to population.
Bath at number 4 is another surprise. A city more associated with Roman history and spa tourism than sports betting, it generates 311 forecasted gambling searches per 1,000 and still clocks over 1,000 betting searches every single day of June. That works out to roughly 43 every hour, around the clock.
Belfast rounds out the top 10 with a forecasted 86,401 World Cup betting searches in June: nearly 2,880 a day, or 120 per hour. Northern Ireland’s strong football following and engaged betting community consistently outperform expectations when international tournaments come around, and the 2026 data is no different.
“What the per-capita data reveals is that betting culture in the UK is far more geographically distributed than most people assume. Manchester leading is no surprise. Norwich, Bath, and Guildford sitting above Birmingham, Liverpool, and London is.
When you strip away raw population and normalise the data, the cities that rise to the top are the ones where betting is woven into the culture at a local level, not just concentrated where the most people happen to live. That distinction matters for anyone trying to understand how the UK actually engages with major sporting events.”
João Mourato, Head of iGaming Product at VIP-Grinders
Total World Cup 2026 Interest: Betting and Beyond
When combining World Cup betting searches and general World Cup interest searches, the picture shifts. This table captures the full breadth of tournament engagement, from committed punters to those simply keeping tabs on fixtures and results.
| # | City | County/Region | Per 1,000 | June Total | Per Week | Per Day | Per Hour |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Manchester | Gtr Manchester | 7,228 | 4,376,820 | 1,010,813 | 145,894 | 6,079 |
| 2 | Norwich | Norfolk | 5,453 | 802,572 | 185,352 | 26,752 | 1,115 |
| 3 | Bristol | Bristol | 3,811 | 1,922,363 | 443,964 | 64,079 | 2,670 |
| 4 | Plymouth | Devon | 3,782 | 1,036,717 | 239,427 | 34,557 | 1,440 |
| 5 | Birmingham | West Midlands | 3,691 | 4,427,744 | 1,022,574 | 147,591 | 6,150 |
| 6 | Bath | Somerset | 3,568 | 349,686 | 80,759 | 11,656 | 486 |
| 7 | Newcastle | Tyne and Wear | 3,453 | 1,133,927 | 261,877 | 37,798 | 1,575 |
| 8 | Middlesbrough | North Yorkshire | 3,123 | 487,722 | 112,638 | 16,257 | 677 |
| 9 | Leeds | West Yorkshire | 2,935 | 2,526,392 | 583,462 | 84,213 | 3,509 |
| 10 | Southampton | Hampshire | 2,890 | 759,664 | 175,442 | 25,322 | 1,055 |
| 11 | Portsmouth | Hampshire | 2,850 | 614,884 | 142,006 | 20,496 | 854 |
| 12 | Guildford | Surrey | 2,767 | 226,880 | 52,397 | 7,563 | 315 |
| 13 | London | Greater London | 2,689 | 24,705,388 | 5,705,632 | 823,513 | 34,313 |
| 14 | Worcester | Worcestershire | 2,569 | 279,294 | 64,502 | 9,310 | 388 |
| 15 | Exeter | Devon | 2,513 | 347,768 | 80,316 | 11,592 | 483 |
| 16 | Bournemouth | Dorset | 2,436 | 493,310 | 113,928 | 16,444 | 685 |
| 17 | Liverpool | Merseyside | 2,402 | 1,244,631 | 287,444 | 41,488 | 1,729 |
| 18 | Huddersfield | West Yorkshire | 2,359 | 339,426 | 78,389 | 11,314 | 471 |
| 19 | Kingston upon Hull | E. Riding Yorks | 2,336 | 650,145 | 150,149 | 21,672 | 903 |
| 20 | Stoke-on-Trent | Staffordshire | 2,317 | 635,202 | 146,698 | 21,173 | 882 |
The Full Picture of Fan Engagement
Manchester stays top with 7,228 total World Cup searches per 1,000 residents projected for June: nearly 4.4 million searches in total. That breaks down to over 145,000 per day, or more than 6,000 every hour. For a city of around 600,000 people, that works out to over 7 World Cup searches per resident across the month.
Norwich holds second on the combined metric too, with 5,453 per 1,000 and 802,572 total projected searches in June: around 26,752 per day. For a city its size, that is an extraordinary concentration of World Cup attention.
London appears at 13th on the combined list, lower than you might expect for the UK’s largest city. Its population of over 9 million dilutes the per-capita figure even though the raw numbers are enormous: 24.7 million projected searches in June breaks down to over 823,000 per day and more than 34,000 every single hour. The absolute volume is unmatched, but it is the per-head engagement that lags.
Middlesbrough makes the top 10 on the overall interest table even though it sits lower on the betting-specific ranking: 487,722 total projected searches in June, or around 16,257 per day. This suggests a city that watches the football closely but may be slightly less focused on the wagering side.
Birmingham, fifth overall, generates projected total searches of 4.4 million in June: around 147,591 per day. The raw scale reflects its size, but its per-1,000 score of 3,691 still puts it comfortably above the mid-table pack.
The UK Cities Switching Off from the World Cup 2026
Not every UK city is gripped by World Cup fever. At the other end of the spectrum, these are the 20 cities with the lowest total World Cup interest per 1,000 residents, combining both betting and general searches into a single score.
| # | City | County/Region | Per 1,000 | June Total | Per Week | Per Day | Per Hour |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rotherham | South Yorkshire | 226 | 63,261 | 14,610 | 2,109 | 88 |
| 2 | Durham | County Durham | 329 | 178,739 | 41,279 | 5,958 | 248 |
| 3 | Newport | Monmouthshire | 383 | 64,275 | 14,844 | 2,143 | 89 |
| 4 | Solihull | West Midlands | 410 | 91,684 | 21,174 | 3,056 | 127 |
| 5 | Cambridge | Cambridgeshire | 425 | 67,096 | 15,496 | 2,237 | 93 |
| 6 | Gloucester | Gloucestershire | 541 | 170,200 | 39,307 | 5,673 | 236 |
| 7 | Slough | Berkshire | 567 | 97,149 | 22,436 | 3,238 | 135 |
| 8 | Doncaster | South Yorkshire | 567 | 183,433 | 42,363 | 6,114 | 255 |
| 9 | Milton Keynes | Buckinghamshire | 572 | 179,945 | 41,558 | 5,998 | 250 |
| 10 | Nottingham | Nottinghamshire | 593 | 198,648 | 45,877 | 6,622 | 276 |
| 11 | Swansea | City/County of Swansea | 611 | 155,172 | 35,836 | 5,172 | 216 |
| 12 | Croydon | Greater London | 644 | 267,616 | 61,805 | 8,921 | 372 |
| 13 | Barnsley | South Yorkshire | 660 | 168,312 | 38,871 | 5,610 | 234 |
| 14 | Wakefield | West Yorkshire | 697 | 261,954 | 60,497 | 8,732 | 364 |
| 15 | Dudley | West Midlands | 698 | 234,167 | 54,080 | 7,806 | 325 |
| 16 | Watford | Hertfordshire | 706 | 75,670 | 17,476 | 2,522 | 105 |
| 17 | Leicester | Leicestershire | 734 | 291,775 | 67,385 | 9,726 | 405 |
| 18 | Bradford | West Yorkshire | 755 | 430,564 | 99,437 | 14,352 | 598 |
| 19 | Sutton | Greater London | 867 | 188,555 | 43,546 | 6,285 | 262 |
| 20 | Northampton | Northamptonshire | 899 | 228,015 | 52,659 | 7,601 | 317 |
Where the World Cup Barely Registers
Rotherham sits bottom of the 80-city table with just 226 total World Cup searches per 1,000 residents projected for June: a monthly total of 63,261 searches. That is 2,109 per day across a city of nearly 280,000 people. Compare that to Manchester’s 145,000-plus per day and the gap is stark.
Durham is second from bottom despite having a population of over 540,000. With 178,739 projected searches in June, around 5,958 per day, it generates less daily World Cup search traffic than Norwich manages in a single hour.
Newport in Wales rounds out the bottom three with 64,275 projected total searches in June: roughly 2,143 per day and just 89 per hour. That is in sharp contrast to Cardiff, ranked 60th overall, which generates 373,822 monthly searches from a city less than 20 miles away.
Cambridge is particularly notable. A city with a large, educated, and transient student population appears far less engaged with football and betting searches than comparable university cities like Oxford (30th overall) or Reading (25th). Cambridge’s 67,096 projected June searches work out to around 93 per day: fewer than four per hour around the clock.
Nottingham, a city with two professional football clubs, ranks 71st overall and generates just 198,648 total searches in June, or around 276 per day. That figure may raise eyebrows among those who consider it a football-passionate city.
“The bottom of this table tells you as much as the top. Rotherham generating 2,109 World Cup searches per day while Manchester generates 145,000 is not just a population gap. When you normalise for size, Rotherham’s engagement is still a fraction of what cities half its population produce.
The South Yorkshire pattern is the finding that stood out most to our team. Three cities from the same county in the bottom 20, while Sheffield sits comfortably in the top half. That kind of hyper-local variation does not show up in national betting data. It only becomes visible when you measure city by city.”
João Mourato, Head of iGaming Product at VIP-Grinders
Methodology & Sources
This research was conducted by the gambling and iGaming experts at VIP-Grinders. The sections below explain the data collection process, scoring methodology, known limitations, and all primary sources referenced in this study.
Data Collection
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Data source | Google Ads Keyword Planner |
| Collection date | 16 June 2026 |
| Baseline period | May 2026 monthly search volumes |
| Geographic scope | 80 major UK towns and cities (England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland) |
| Category 1 | World Cup Betting Interest (intent to place bets) |
| Category 2 | World Cup General Interest (fixtures, streams, results) |
| Normalisation | Per 1,000 residents using current population figures |
| Betting uplift multiplier | 8.58x (758% uplift, 2022 World Cup tournament months vs baseline) |
| General interest uplift multiplier | 7.57x (2022 World Cup tournament months vs baseline) |
| Baseline comparison period | October 2022 vs November and December 2022 |
Per-week figures are derived by dividing June monthly totals by 4.33. Per-day figures use a 30-day month. Per-hour figures divide daily totals by 24.
Limitations
- Search volume is estimated, not exact: Google Ads Keyword Planner provides modelled search volume ranges, not precise counts. Actual search volumes may differ from the figures reported here.
- Search interest does not equal betting activity: A high volume of betting-related searches does not confirm that bets were placed. Search data captures intent and interest, not transactions.
- The 2022 uplift multiplier assumes similar engagement patterns: June 2026 forecasts apply the 8.58x betting uplift observed during the 2022 Qatar World Cup. The 2026 tournament differs in format (48 teams vs 32), host region (North America vs Middle East), and time zone alignment with UK audiences. Actual uplift may be higher or lower.
- May 2026 baseline may include pre-tournament anticipation: May search volumes may already reflect early World Cup interest building ahead of the June kickoff, which could compress the apparent uplift during the tournament itself.
- City boundaries are administrative, not behavioural: Population figures and search volumes are mapped to administrative city boundaries. Commuter flows, university populations, and suburban catchment areas may affect how search activity is attributed to specific cities.
- Per-capita normalisation favours smaller cities: Cities with smaller populations need fewer absolute searches to produce high per-1,000 scores. This is by design (to measure intensity rather than scale), but direct comparisons between cities of very different sizes should account for this effect.
About VIP-Grinders
VIP-Grinders is an independent poker and iGaming affiliate established in 2013, covering online poker, casino gaming, crypto casinos, and sports betting across global markets. Our research hub publishes original data studies on gambling trends, player behaviour, and industry analysis, including our US Gambling Survey 2026 covering wins, losses, and betting behaviour across 2,000 American adults.
Sources
- Google Ads Keyword Planner (data collected 16 June 2026)
- Betting and Gaming Council (2026)
- Paysafe World Cup Betting Research (January 2026)
- The London Economic / H2 Gambling Capital global betting handle estimates
- Sportradar global operator network betting data
- Nationwide survey of 2,000 UK gamblers (2026)
Update Schedule
This page is part of the VIP-Grinders research programme and is maintained at an evergreen URL. If a future World Cup generates comparable data, this page will be updated in place with fresh analysis rather than creating a new URL.
If you are a journalist, researcher, or analyst using data from this study, contact João Mourato at VIP-Grinders for verification, additional context, or access to the underlying data.
FAQs
Which UK city bets the most on the World Cup?
Manchester leads all 80 cities analysed with a forecasted 477 World Cup betting searches per 1,000 residents in June 2026. That translates to roughly 288,717 betting searches across the month, or 9,624 per day. Norwich is second at 459 per 1,000, followed by Glasgow at 362 per 1,000.
How much money will be bet on the World Cup 2026?
The Betting and Gaming Council forecasts that over £1 billion will be wagered through UK Gambling Commission-licensed operators during the tournament. Globally, analysts project the total betting handle could reach approximately $50 billion, up from an estimated $35 billion at the 2022 Qatar World Cup. Pre-tournament research from Paysafe found that 60% of UK fans planned to bet on the 2026 World Cup.
Is Manchester the biggest betting city in the UK?
According to this study, Manchester has the highest concentration of World Cup betting searches of any UK city when measured per 1,000 residents. It generates a forecasted 477 gambling searches per 1,000 people in June 2026, nearly 9x the May baseline. Whether this extends beyond World Cup betting to general year-round betting activity is not measured by this dataset.
Why does London rank so low on World Cup betting interest?
London ranks 13th on combined World Cup interest (betting plus general searches) despite generating by far the highest raw search volume: 24.7 million projected searches in June, over 823,000 per day. Its population of over 9 million dilutes the per-capita figure. When measured per 1,000 residents, London scores 2,689 versus Manchester’s 7,228. The absolute volume is unmatched, but the per-head engagement is lower than a dozen smaller cities.
Which UK cities have the least World Cup interest?
Rotherham sits bottom of all 80 cities with just 226 total World Cup searches per 1,000 residents. Durham is second from bottom at 329 per 1,000, followed by Newport at 383. Several South Yorkshire cities cluster in the bottom 20: Rotherham, Doncaster, and Barnsley all feature despite the region’s footballing heritage. Cambridge also ranks among the least engaged, trailing comparable university cities like Oxford and Reading by a wide margin.
How was this World Cup betting data collected?
Search volume data was collected on 16 June 2026 using Google Ads Keyword Planner, examining May 2026 monthly volumes across 80 UK cities. Two categories were analysed: betting interest (queries with intent to wager) and general World Cup interest (fixtures, streams, results). All scores were normalised per 1,000 residents. June 2026 forecasts were projected using a 8.58x uplift multiplier for betting searches and 7.57x for general queries, based on the average uplift observed during the 2022 FIFA World Cup tournament months.
How many people bet on the World Cup in the UK?
The Betting and Gaming Council estimates that one in three British betting account holders will place at least one bet on the World Cup 2026. Paysafe research puts the figure higher, finding that 60% of UK fans planned to bet on the tournament. A Nationwide survey of 2,000 UK gamblers found that 68% expected to spend more on gambling in 2026 than the previous year.
Does Norwich really bet more than London on the World Cup?
Per capita, yes. Norwich generates 459 World Cup betting searches per 1,000 residents in June 2026, significantly more than London on a per-head basis. However, London’s raw search volume is far higher: 24.7 million projected searches versus Norwich’s 67,525. The difference reflects population size. Norwich’s concentration of betting interest relative to its population of under 150,000 is what makes it the standout result in this study.
