What Is a Loss Limit?
A cap on your actual, real-money losses, not just what you deposit
A loss limit restricts the net amount you can lose at an online casino in a given time period. "Net" is the key word: if you deposit $200, lose $150, and win back $50, your net loss is $100, not $200. The limit tracks real financial harm, not gross spending activity.
This distinction makes loss limits more precise than deposit limits for controlling financial risk. You could deposit $200 and, if you run it up to $600, you have deposited $200 but lost nothing at all. A deposit limit would fire at $200 regardless; a loss limit would not fire until you actually start losing net money from your account.
In Ontario, all iGaming Ontario licensed operators must offer loss limits. Under the AGCO's standards for internet gaming, this is a non-negotiable requirement, the same as deposit limits. A player can set a daily, weekly, or monthly loss limit, or any combination of the three, entirely independently of any deposit limit they also choose to set.
The majority of gambling-related financial harm comes not from single large deposits but from extended losing streaks where players keep depositing in an attempt to recover previous losses, a pattern called "chasing." Loss limits specifically prevent chasing: once you have lost your pre-set net amount, play stops automatically, regardless of how many times you deposit small amounts trying to claw it back.
Loss Limits vs Deposit Limits
Two different levers that serve different purposes; both are worth using
Loss limits and deposit limits are often confused, but they control fundamentally different things. Understanding the difference helps you choose which one (or both) suits your situation.
| Loss Limit | Deposit Limit | |
|---|---|---|
| What it measures | Net money lost (deposits minus winnings) | Gross money transferred into your account |
| Triggered by | Actual gambling losses up to the cap | Depositing up to the cap regardless of outcome |
| Winning session impact | Limit counter resets partially (wins offset losses) | No impact: each deposit counts regardless of results |
| Primary protection | Prevents chasing losses; stops extended losing runs | Prevents large initial funding that enables big losses |
| Best used when | You want to cap the financial harm from a bad run | You want a hard ceiling on how much enters your account |
| Can they coexist? | Yes. Set both for layered protection. | Yes. Set both for layered protection. |
The recommended combination
Many gambling harm reduction specialists recommend using both tools simultaneously. A deposit limit prevents you from loading in more money than you intend; a loss limit ensures that even within that deposited amount, your actual losses are capped at a specific figure. Together, they create a two-stage safety net that is more effective than either tool alone.
Example: A player sets a $200/week deposit limit and a $150/week loss limit. In any given week, they can deposit at most $200. Of that, they can lose at most $150. If they deposit $200 and run it up to $300 through winning, the loss limit still protects them: they would need to lose $150 net (falling from $300 to $150) before the limit fires. The deposit limit protects the "in" side; the loss limit protects the "down" side.
How to Set a Loss Limit
Available as a self-serve tool at every iGO-licensed operator
Access your account at the iGO-licensed casino where you want to set the limit. Loss limits are self-serve at every licensed operator; you do not need to call or email support.
- Works on mobile and desktop equally.
- Set the limit before you start playing, ideally when you are not in an active session.
- If you have multiple accounts at different operators, repeat this process at each one.
Find the "Responsible Gambling", "Player Protection", "My Limits", or similar section in your account area. Loss limits may be listed alongside deposit limits, or in a separate sub-section.
- If loss limits are not immediately visible, look for "Spending Limits" or "Financial Limits".
- If you genuinely cannot find loss limits, use the operator's live chat and ask specifically for "loss limits" by name.
- All iGO operators must offer this feature; it cannot be hidden or unavailable.
Select your preferred timeframe and enter your maximum tolerable net loss in Canadian dollars. You can set multiple timeframes at once.
- Think about your monthly entertainment budget and work backwards: what fraction of that budget can you genuinely afford to lose?
- A conservative starting point is 2-5% of your monthly take-home income. Adjust to what feels right.
- Setting all three timeframes simultaneously gives the most granular protection.
Review the confirmation screen carefully. Confirm the limit to activate it immediately. For decreases, the new lower limit takes effect right away. For increases, the operator's cooling-off delay applies.
- Screenshot or note the limit and date for your records.
- Most operators send a confirmation email; check your inbox.
- You can always reduce your limit again at any time with no waiting period.
What Ontario Law Requires
The AGCO standards that govern loss limits at every iGO operator
Ontario's iGaming regulatory framework is enforced by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) and delivered through iGaming Ontario (iGO). Loss limits form part of the mandatory suite of responsible gambling tools that every licensed operator must implement as a condition of their licence.
Every iGO-licensed operator must offer loss limits. This requirement has been in force since the Ontario iGaming market launched in April 2022. Operators who fail to offer loss limits are in breach of AGCO standards and subject to regulatory action including fines and licence conditions.
When you set a lower loss limit or reduce an existing one, the change must take effect instantly. The operator cannot delay a downward adjustment. Your new lower limit protects you from the moment you confirm it.
Requests to raise a loss limit must include a mandatory cooling-off period before the higher limit activates. The specific length varies by operator but the AGCO mandates a meaningful delay. This prevents impulsive increases made mid-session after a large loss.
Operators must calculate and display your progress toward your loss limit in real time or near-real time. You should be able to check how much of your loss limit you have used at any point during your session, typically visible in your account settings or the responsible gambling dashboard.
When you approach or reach your loss limit, the operator must notify you clearly. This notification must be impossible to miss: a prominent on-screen alert, not a subtle indicator. The AGCO specifically requires that limit-hit notifications be presented in a way that makes stopping the session the natural action.
How to Choose the Right Loss Limit Amount
A framework for setting a limit that is genuinely protective, not just a formality
The most common mistake players make when setting a loss limit is choosing a number that feels comfortable in the moment rather than one that reflects their actual financial situation. A loss limit set at $500/day when your monthly entertainment budget is $200 is not a limit; it is a formality that will never fire.
The following framework helps you calculate a genuinely protective loss limit.
List your net monthly income after tax. This is your starting point.
Rent, mortgage, utilities, groceries, transportation, childcare, loan repayments. What remains is your discretionary income.
Treat gambling as one entertainment category alongside dining out, streaming services, and other leisure. Most financial advisors suggest gambling should be at most 5 to 10% of your total discretionary income.
Your monthly loss limit is your gambling budget. Set it at or below this number. Then set a weekly limit at roughly 25% of the monthly figure, and a daily limit at 10%. These ratios prevent you from burning the entire monthly budget in a single weekend.
A loss limit is only effective if it would actually fire before causing you meaningful financial stress. If your limit is so high that reaching it would still be affordable, it provides little real protection. Set it at the maximum amount you can lose without affecting your obligations or quality of life.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about loss limits in Ontario, answered plainly