Responsible Gambling

allincasinolist.com publishes information about licensed online gambling operators. We believe gambling should stay entertainment, never a way to solve money problems or escape distress. This page explains safer play, self-checks, and free, confidential help available in Great Britain. It is general information only — not medical, legal, or financial advice.

If you are in immediate danger or crisis, contact local emergency services. If you feel you cannot stay safe around gambling right now, use the helpline numbers below — many operate 24/7.

1. Who can gamble legally

In the United Kingdom, it is illegal for anyone under 18 to gamble. Our content is intended solely for adults. If you share a device with young people, use parental controls, separate profiles, and never save operator passwords where minors can reach them.

2. Keep it affordable: time and money limits

  • Decide your maximum spend in advance and stop when you reach it — treat it like a ticket to a show, not an “investment”.
  • Set time limits before you start; alarms help you leave the session intentionally.
  • Never chase losses. Increasing stakes to recover money is one of the strongest predictors of harm.
  • Avoid gambling when intoxicated, sleep-deprived, upset, or angry — judgement drops quickly.
  • Do not borrow money (including credit cards where restricted) to fund gambling.

3. Tools available from licensed operators

UK-licensed operators must offer safer gambling controls. Availability and labels vary, but look for:

  • Deposit, loss, and session limits you can lower instantly; increases may be delayed to “cool off”.
  • Reality checks (pop-up timers summarising time and spend).
  • Time-outs (short cooling-off periods).
  • Self-exclusion through the operator’s own register and, across many UK licensed brands, via GAMSTOP (national online self-exclusion scheme for Great Britain).
  • Product blocking (for example slots-only blocks where offered).

If you cannot find the controls, ask live support to point you to “safer gambling” or “responsible gambling” settings, or check the footer of the operator’s website.

4. Signs that gambling might be harming you

Harm is not only about losing large sums. It can include:

  • preoccupation with gambling, lying about time or money spent, or hiding statements;
  • neglecting work, study, relationships, or self-care because of betting;
  • mood swings tied to wins and losses, or feelings of guilt and shame;
  • chasing losses, increasing stakes, or returning soon after vowing to stop;
  • using gambling to cope with anxiety, depression, loneliness, or trauma.

If several items feel familiar, consider pausing entirely and seeking support — many people recover once they reach out early.

5. Free help in Great Britain (confidential)

National Gambling Helpline0808 8020 133 (free from the UK). Provided by GamCare on behalf of GambleAware. Webchat and forum support are available via gamcare.org.uk.

BeGambleAware — independent charity funding research, education, and treatment. Information hub: begambleaware.org.

GAMSTOP — register once to self-exclude from many UK-licensed online operators: gamstop.co.uk.

Gamblers Anonymous — peer-facilitated meetings across the UK; local meeting lists are published via the central GA sites you will find linked from major help hubs such as GamCare or BeGambleAware.

Gam-Anon offers support for anyone affected by someone else’s gambling; meeting information is available through the same national help networks.

Residents of Scotland and Northern Ireland can use the same UK-wide helpline; advisors will signpost regional or community services where helpful. NHS and charity routes also publish local directories online.

6. Banks, devices, and blocking software

Many UK banks allow gambling blocks on debit cards or account categories. Device-level blockers (commercial apps and DNS filters) add friction if you decide to take a break. These tools are not perfect, but they buy time when willpower fluctuates.

7. Underage gambling and parental vigilance

Loot boxes, social casino games, and sports content blur lines for teenagers. If a young person in your care shows sudden secretive phone use, unexplained expenditure, or interest in “skins” markets, investigate calmly and seek professional guidance.

8. How we approach this topic on the Site

We aim to describe products factually and to highlight safer gambling features where relevant. We are a publisher, not an operator — we cannot set limits on your behalf or close remote accounts. Your operator’s licenceholder and, where applicable, GAMSTOP handle platform-level exclusion.

Commercial links on the Site may earn us commission if you choose to register with third parties; that does not change the importance of playing within your means. See our Affiliate Disclosure and Editorial Policy.

9. Data, cookies, and marketing

If you wish to reduce personalised gambling advertising, review platform ad preferences, use device tracking restrictions where available, and read our Privacy Policy for how we handle analytics and referrals.

10. Contact us (non-urgent)

For corrections to safer-gambling information on a specific page, or accessibility requests: [email protected]. We are not a crisis service and cannot provide treatment; please use the helpline numbers above if you need immediate support.

Last updated: April 2026.

Safer gambling resources & support (UK)