Responsible Gambling
Practical guidance for staying in control: set limits, recognise the warning signs and know where to find professional support.
At Very Well casino, we support safer gambling habits and encourage every player to stay in control at all times. Gambling can be entertaining, but only when it is treated as paid entertainment within a clear personal budget — never as a way to earn money or recover losses.
Set Personal Limits
Define clear budgets and session time before you play. Never gamble with money needed for rent, bills, food, or essentials. Use deposit, loss and session limits available in the operator’s account settings to keep your activity within a comfortable range.
Keep Gambling as Entertainment
Gambling is not a way to make money. Wins and losses are part of chance-based entertainment, and outcomes cannot be predicted. The cost of play should always be seen as the price of entertainment, similar to other leisure activities.
Know the Warning Signs
Take a break if you notice any of the following patterns:
- Gambling causes stress, anxiety or affects your sleep.
- You spend more than you planned or borrow money to play.
- You chase losses, hoping to “win back” what you lost.
- Gambling negatively affects work, studies or relationships.
- You hide your activity from family or close friends.
Take Immediate Action
If needed, use account controls such as deposit limits, cool-off periods, reality checks, or self-exclusion tools available on operator platforms. These tools are designed to be used at any time, not only when problems become severe.
Support in the UK
For confidential advice, contact reputable support organisations. Professional support can help early and effectively — there is no need to wait until problems escalate.
Protect Minors
Never allow under-18s to access gambling content. Use device-level parental controls and secure account credentials. Family-filtering tools such as Net Nanny or Cyber Patrol can help restrict access on shared devices.
A Final Reminder
Stay in control: play with money you can afford to lose, set limits before you start, and take regular breaks. If gambling stops being fun, it is the right moment to stop and seek support.