Consent-Based Marketing in Ontario iGaming: What Players Agree To and How to Opt Out
Ontario’s regulated iGaming market puts unusual weight on one idea: offers should not chase you around the public internet. If you see a bonus-like message in a billboard, a broadcast spot, or a generic social ad, it is usually not an accident that the details are missing.
Regulations exist to keep inducements out of general view and place them where adults can make an active choice. So treat marketing consent as a persistent preference, not a forgotten checkbox. For unbiased tools and support, the RG Canada portal provides a clear resource focused on responsible play, independent research, and more.
This guide breaks down what “consent-based marketing” means in Ontario iGaming, what you typically agree to when you opt in, and how to opt out cleanly without guesswork.
What “active consent” means in Ontario iGaming
Ontario’s framework separates public advertising from direct marketing of inducements. In practice, inducements, bonuses, and credits are treated as higher-risk messaging, so the system restricts where they can show up and how they can be delivered. Legal summaries of the standards describe a carve-out that allows inducements to be communicated only on an operator’s site/app or through direct communication after the player has first consented.
Two details matter for players:
- Consent must be active, not assumed. The idea is that you intentionally opt in, rather than being enrolled by default.
- Consent is tied to the specific operator’s site/app. Commentary around the standards notes that consent gathered elsewhere, such as third-party sites, does not satisfy the requirement in the same way.
If you remember only one thing, make it this: in Ontario, offers are supposed to be something you choose to receive, not something that follows you automatically.
Public ads vs direct marketing: where bonuses can appear
The easiest way to understand the system is to map it to “where you are” when you see an offer.
Public domain (broad-reach): public advertising of inducements is described as strictly prohibited, including targeted and algorithm-based ads.
Operator-controlled space: once you choose to visit an operator’s gaming site or app, offers can be displayed there.
Direct marketing: offers can be sent directly, but only to individuals who have consented on the operator’s site.
This is why many Ontario-facing ads feel “brand-forward” rather than “deal-forward.” The detailed bonus terms are pushed into operator environments (site/app) or into consented channels, not into mass marketing.
What you are actually opting into
When you opt in to direct marketing from an operator, you are usually agreeing to receive promotional messages through one or more channels. One legal summary notes that “direct marketing and advertising” can include direct messaging via social media, email, texts, and phone calls.
From a player perspective, here is what to assume you are approving unless the settings say otherwise:
- Channel permission: email, SMS, app notifications, and sometimes direct messages.
- Offer-based messaging: bonus or credit information delivered in direct communications after you consent.
- Compliance-style disclosures: offers are expected to be truthful, and material conditions should be disclosed when the inducement is presented, according to summaries of the standards.
This is not automatically “good” or “bad.” You choose the access, but also manage the exposure. If marketing pushes you toward poor decisions, willpower is the wrong tool. Remove the trigger entirely.
How to opt out without losing your account access
Opting out should be straightforward, but it works best when you do it in layers. Canada’s anti-spam rules around commercial electronic messages are commonly summarized as requiring an easy-to-use unsubscribe mechanism and sender contact information in those messages.
Use this sequence:
- Use the unsubscribe method inside the message.
For email, that is typically an unsubscribe link. For SMS, it may be a stop instruction or link, depending on the sender. - Change your in-account marketing preferences.
Most regulated operators provide toggles for marketing categories (promotions, product updates, newsletters). Turn off promotions first, then anything else you do not want. - Withdraw consent for inducements specifically.
If the operator separates “offers” from “service updates,” disable the inducement or promotions category so you still receive essential account messages. - Escalate to support if the messages do not stop.
Still getting marketing after opting out? Contact operator support immediately. Request written confirmation that your promotional consent is revoked. Document everything—screenshots of your settings and the messages provide clear evidence.
The goal is not to purge every message. It is to stop the ones that pressure decisions.
When to escalate: complaints and responsible gambling support
Ontario’s regulator sets standards, but there is also a Canada-wide layer for advertising complaints. Ad Standards explains that it administers complaints under the Canadian Gaming Association’s Code for Responsible Gaming Advertising, accepted as of January 1, 2026.
If something feels off, document the basics before you act:
- where you saw it (platform or channel),
- when you saw it,
- what made it concerning (youth appeal, unclear disclosure, implied certainty of winning, or inducement messaging in a public ad).
Then, if the issue fits advertising conduct, Ad Standards provides a complaint pathway under the CGA Code.
The CGA Code also defines “advertiser” broadly, explicitly including affiliates and influencers, which matters when promotional content is coming from third parties.
On the personal side, if marketing exposure is driving unwanted play, treat that as a signal to tighten your environment: reduce promotional channels, set limits before sessions, and use responsible gambling resources when you need support.

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