Responsible gambling

Responsible gambling at Betcooper

Responsible gambling means gambling only if you are legally eligible, treating it as entertainment rather than income, setting limits, taking breaks, and using self-exclusion or support resources if gambling stops feeling controlled.

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Risk statement

Gambling involves real risk

Betcooper does not present gambling as a way to make money. Losses are possible, outcomes are uncertain, and no product feature should be treated as protection from risk.

Age and eligibility

18+ only, or the higher legal age where you live

Betcooper is intended only for adults who are legally allowed to gamble in their jurisdiction. Age, location, and eligibility checks may be required before any product access.

Limits and safer play

Set boundaries before you play

If product tools are available in your market, they may include deposit, spending, stake, or session limits, along with cooling-off breaks. Use the strongest limit that helps you stay in control, not the highest one you can accept.

Self-exclusion

Take a full break when control feels weaker

If gambling stops feeling manageable, self-exclusion should be used instead of trying to win losses back. Responsible gambling and account-safety questions should be sent to support@betcooper.com so the request can be routed correctly.

Fair Pool boundary

Fair Pool is not a reason to gamble more

Fair Cashback and other Fair Pool messaging must never be treated as a reason to bet more, bet longer, or chase losses. A player benefit does not remove the underlying gambling risk.

A player benefit is not a safety guarantee

Betcooper's Fair Pool messaging must stay inside responsible-gambling boundaries. Cashback, rewards, or proof language must never imply that risk is removed, losses will be recovered, or more gambling becomes sensible.

Warning signs

Know when gambling is no longer feeling controlled

  • Gambling feels like a way to solve money problems or recover losses.
  • You are spending more time or money than you planned.
  • You feel pressure to keep playing after a loss.
  • You hide gambling activity from family or friends.
  • Gambling is causing stress, debt, conflict, or loss of sleep.

Help and escalation

Use the right support route

Immediate risk comes first

If someone is in immediate danger, contact local emergency or crisis services first. Betcooper's support route is not an emergency service.

Use verified local support

Country-specific support resources belong in localized versions of this page after they are reviewed. Until then, use a trusted local gambling-harm, mental-health, or crisis-support service in your area.

Use the official safety contact route

For responsible gambling questions, limits, cooling-off, self-exclusion, or account-safety concerns, contact support@betcooper.com.

support@betcooper.com

FAQ

Responsible gambling questions, answered directly.

Short answers for this page only.

What does responsible gambling mean?

Responsible gambling means gambling only if you are legally eligible, treating it as entertainment rather than income, setting limits, taking breaks, and using self-exclusion or support resources if gambling stops feeling controlled.

Can users set limits?

Where product controls are available, they may include deposit, spending, stake, session, or cooling-off limits. Only approved and implemented tools should be relied on, and those controls should be used to reduce risk, not to extend play.

Is self-exclusion available?

Self-exclusion is part of Betcooper's responsible gambling baseline. If you want to stop access because gambling feels difficult to control, contact support@betcooper.com so the request can be routed correctly.

Is the Fair Pool a reason to gamble more?

No. Fair Pool participation, including Fair Cashback, must never be framed as a reason to gamble more, chase losses, or treat gambling as low risk.

Where can I get help?

For Betcooper-related safety requests, use support@betcooper.com. If someone is in immediate danger, contact local emergency or crisis services first. For broader support, use a trusted local gambling-harm or mental-health support service in your area.