By Sylvia Kairouz
Gambling ad rules and consumer protection at Betty Casino
If you’ve spent any time in Ontario in the past year, you’ve seen a Betty Casino advertisement. They’re on transit, on streaming platforms, on social media, and – since the MLSE partnership launched in late 2025 – courtside and rinkside at Raptors and Maple Leafs games. Betty has become one of the most visible iGaming brands in the province, which makes this particular page more relevant than it might seem at first glance. Advertising in Canada’s regulated gambling market is no longer a free-for-all. The rules have tightened significantly in 2026, and Betty operates within one of the most structured advertising and consumer protection frameworks in North America. This guide explains what those rules actually mean, how Betty complies with them, and what protections Canadian players have because of them.
The Canadian gambling advertising landscape in 2026
The single biggest development in Canadian gambling advertising in recent years took effect on January 1, 2026, when the Canadian Gaming Association’s Code for Responsible Gaming Advertising came into force. This code was developed throughout 2025 by the CGA in collaboration with industry representatives and is now administered by Ad Standards, Canada’s independent advertising standards body. It applies to all gambling advertising directed at Canadian audiences across every media format – digital, social, television, print, and outdoor.
The CGA Code sits on top of existing AGCO requirements, not in place of them. That means operators like Betty are now accountable to two parallel frameworks simultaneously. The AGCO enforces its Registrar’s Standards for Internet Gaming directly as a licensing condition. Ad Standards, separately, accepts complaints from consumers and competitors about violations of the CGA Code from any member of the public starting January 2026.
Three core principles run through the CGA Code:
- Integrity – all gambling advertising must truthfully represent products and not mislead consumers about odds, winnings, or the nature of the service
- Transparency – promotional terms, wagering conditions, and eligibility restrictions must be clearly stated in all materials
- Social responsibility – advertising must not appeal to minors, must not target vulnerable individuals, and must include responsible gambling messaging
What AGCO standards require of Betty’s advertising
Betty Casino holds its operating licence from the AGCO and is managed by iGaming Ontario. That licence comes with specific advertising obligations that go beyond what a non-licensed offshore casino would ever be subject to. Here’s what the AGCO’s Registrar’s Standards require in practice:
| Requirement | What it means for Betty |
|---|---|
| No celebrity or athlete endorsements | Active and retired sports personalities banned from Betty advertising since February 2024 |
| No promotional inducements in public-facing ads | Bonus offers cannot be the headline of general broadcast or outdoor advertising |
| Age and identity verification before any marketing | Betty cannot send bonus-related communications to unverified accounts |
| Responsible gambling messaging in all ads | Every Betty advertisement must include a responsible gambling reminder |
| No targeting of self-excluded players | Betty must remove self-excluded accounts from all marketing lists immediately |
| No advertising targeting high-risk players | Specific measures required to limit marketing to identified problem gamblers |
The ban on celebrities in gambling advertising is worth explaining specifically, because it came into force in February 2024 and changed the look of the entire Ontario iGaming market. You will not see a current or former NHL player, NBA player, or professional athlete of any kind in a Betty advertisement. That rule is enforced as a licensing condition, meaning a violation puts the operator’s registration at risk – a meaningful deterrent.
What the CGA Code adds from January 2026
The new CGA Code supplements the AGCO standards with additional requirements that apply across all Canadian media, not just Ontario. For Betty, which operates nationally regulated content and is expanding beyond Ontario in 2026, these rules matter for everything from social media posts to app store marketing materials.
Key additions under the CGA Code effective January 2026:
- Prohibition on advertising that depicts gambling as a solution to financial problems or personal difficulties
- Ban on content that portrays gambling as a guaranteed path to wealth, social status, or success
- Requirement that advertising not appeal to minors through imagery, language, or placement on youth-oriented platforms
- Mandatory inclusion of problem gambling resources in digital advertising
- Prohibition on misleading claims about the probability of winning or the typical player experience
The language around “misleading depictions of gambling behaviour” is particularly relevant for casino advertising. A Betty advertisement that shows a player winning a large jackpot and suggests this is a typical or expected outcome would violate the CGA Code. Responsible marketing means portraying gambling as entertainment with variable outcomes – not as an investment strategy or a reliable income source.
Consumer protection rights for Canadian players
Beyond advertising rules, Betty Casino players benefit from a comprehensive consumer protection framework built into the iGaming Ontario operating agreement. These protections apply regardless of what a player has read in the marketing material that brought them to the platform.
Player protections under the iGaming Ontario framework:
| Protection | What it covers |
|---|---|
| Segregated player funds | Your deposits are held separately from company operating funds at Canadian chartered banks |
| RNG certification | All games audited by eCOGRA for fair, random outcomes |
| Dispute resolution | Unresolved complaints can be escalated to iGaming Ontario as regulator |
| KYC and AML controls | Identity verified before withdrawals to prevent fraud and money laundering |
| Responsible gambling tools | Deposit limits, loss limits, playtime limits, self-exclusion – all mandatory |
| Privacy protection | Data handling governed by PIPEDA and AGCO data standards |
| Marketing opt-out | Players can withdraw consent from all marketing at any time |
| Withdrawal rights | No casino can withhold legitimate winnings – disputes escalatable to iGO |
The segregated funds requirement is one of the most important protections that many players don’t know about. If Betty Casino were ever to face financial difficulties, your deposited funds would be protected in separate accounts and would not be accessible to creditors. This is a direct requirement under the iGaming Ontario operating agreement and distinguishes regulated Ontario operators from offshore alternatives where this protection simply does not exist.
How to report an advertising complaint in 2026
If you see a Betty Casino advertisement that you believe violates either the AGCO standards or the new CGA Code, you have concrete options for reporting it. This is new in 2026 – the Ad Standards complaints process for gambling advertising was formally opened on January 1 and has been accepting public submissions since then.
Steps to report a gambling advertising complaint:
- Document the advertisement – screenshot, record, or note the specific content, platform, date, and placement
- Identify the specific rule you believe was violated – AGCO Registrar’s Standards or the CGA Code
- Submit a complaint to Ad Standards at adstandards.ca for CGA Code violations
- Submit a complaint directly to the AGCO at agco.ca for violations of Ontario licensing standards
- If the complaint relates to a specific Betty promotion that affected your account, contact Betty’s compliance team at [email protected]
Ad Standards will adjudicate complaints under both the CGA Code and the Canadian Code of Advertising Standards. Operators found in violation can be required to amend or withdraw advertising, and repeated violations can be referred back to the AGCO as a licensing matter.
Betty’s approach to responsible advertising in practice
I’ve paid attention to Betty’s advertising across Ontario throughout 2025 and into 2026, and it’s genuinely different from the saturated sports betting market of a few years ago. The brand’s marketing leans on local identity – cultural events, community partnerships, the MLSE deal – rather than on bonus size or jackpot potential as the primary hook. The responsible gambling message “play responsibly” appears consistently across Betty’s digital advertising, and I have not observed celebrity endorsements or misleading jackpot-focused content in their current campaigns.
That said, Betty’s advertising volume is high. If you’re based in Ontario, you will encounter Betty branding regularly. If at any point the advertising feels like it’s targeting you at a time when gambling isn’t a healthy choice, the tools to manage that experience are built directly into your account. You can opt out of all marketing communications through your account settings, and that request must be acted on immediately under both AGCO and CGA Code requirements.