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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
Entertainment
Bethan Shufflebotham & Milly Vincent

Wilko axes favourite item in every store effective immediately

Shoppers will no longer be able to try their luck at the tills at Wilko after the high street chain confirmed it's stopped selling lottery tickets in 2023. The retailer has announced it'll no longer sell National Lottery tickets and scratch cards going into 2023.

Following signs appearing in stores to spread the message, the retailer has said it "would require a significant investment" to continue the service which "isn't a priority", Birmingham Live reports.

The last day to buy lottery tickets and scratch cards at Wilko was on New Years Eve (December 31). The firm said that the decision was a "smart choice" for the business.

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Instead Wilko stated that it would focus on delivering "great value products at great prices". It also added that it was investing in "supporting" staff.

A spokesperson for Wilko said: "Our focus is continuing to invest in becoming the best everyday household and garden retailer we can be. Our customers come to us for great value products at great prices when they need them and right now, we're making smart choices to trade a business.

"Continuing to offer the Lottery in our stores moving forward would require a significant investment that, right now, isn’t a priority and is better spent on improving our customer proposition and supporting team members."

The store said that it had begun its "journey with the National Lottery" to raise money for good causes. But said it had since introduced its "own charities strategy" that raises up to £10,000 a week for charity.

Wilko added: "We’ve designed our own charities strategy including the recent introduction of 'Pennies' and are raising more money than ever, direct for charities supported by the wilko 'Together for Families' programme; Save the Children, Alzheimer’s Society and Teenage Cancer Trust.

"Over the last four years we’ve raised over £2M and now with Pennies we're providing direct support at a time when charities need it more than ever and our customers’ generous donations regularly peak at £10,000 per week."

Wilkinsons has been running since 1930 when it was founded by James Kemsey Wilkinson as a hardware store in Leicester. The founder's family still own the business today.

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