A new free course teaches operators how to build better systems, with a 30-day rollout guide and input from a free blocking tool.
Casino Guru Academy has launched a free online course on best practice, developed with BetBlocker International. It gives operators practical guidance for designing and improving systems, including a 30-day implementation guide. The course promotes a multi-layered approach combining self-exclusion with blocking software, helplines, and treatment resources.
- The Self-Exclusion Course
- Why Self-Exclusion Standards Vary
- A Multi-Layered Approach to Protection
Casino Guru Academy has launched a free course on self-exclusion best practice. It was developed with input from BetBlocker International. The training aims to help operators strengthen player protection and improve responsible gambling. Titled “Advanced Insights: Self-Exclusion Best Practice,” it offers practical, usable guidance. That includes a 30-day implementation guide for operators. According to Casino Guru, the course responds to wide differences in self-exclusion rules across jurisdictions. Those differences create inconsistent player protection and operational gaps. The course is free and open to iGaming operators. It targets one of responsible gambling’s most important tools.
The Self-Exclusion Course
The course is built on a documented standard. It draws on the Recommended Code of Practice for Online Self-Exclusion, published in 2025. Dr Margaret Carran developed that code with Casino Guru and 10 iGaming professionals. The training turns those principles into practical steps. It covers designing, reviewing, and enhancing self-exclusion systems. The 30-day implementation guide gives operators a concrete rollout path. Šimon Vincze, Head of Safer and Sustainable Gaming at Casino Guru, framed the goal plainly. He said the aim was guidance operators can actually use. However, he stressed it does not replace local regulation. According to Vincze, the course avoids a rigid global rulebook. Instead, it spreads findings on best practice that operators can adapt to their market, teams, and players. The focus on adaptability reflects the fragmented regulatory landscape. Our guide to what makes a casino safe covers why these tools matter to players.
Why Self-Exclusion Standards Vary
Self-exclusion lets players voluntarily bar themselves from gambling. However, how it works differs sharply by market. Some jurisdictions run national registers. Others leave it to individual operators. Rules on duration, scope, and reinstatement vary widely too. According to Casino Guru, that inconsistency is the problem the course targets. A player protected in one market may find weaker safeguards in another. Operators working across borders face a patchwork of requirements. The course aims to raise the baseline without overriding local law. It offers a common reference for what good self-exclusion looks like. As a result, operators can benchmark their systems against best practice. The fragmentation mirrors wider regulatory divergence. Markets like the Netherlands have tightened affordability and exclusion rules sharply, as our report on the Dutch KSA means-test changes shows. Others rely more on operator initiative.
A Multi-Layered Approach to Protection
The course argues self-exclusion works best within a wider safety net. It promotes a multi-layered approach to player protection. That combines with blocking software, helplines, and treatment programmes. Other safer-gambling resources sit alongside them. Part of the course was built with BetBlocker International, a free blocking tool. It shows how blocking software complements. The software helps vulnerable players prevent access to gambling services. BetBlocker CEO Pedro Romero explained the logic. He said self-exclusion should come with clear signposting to support services and practical blocking tools. According to Romero, blocking tools help people hold their decision across operators. That matters whether someone wants to reduce harm or stop entirely. He said BetBlocker exists to make such protections free, anonymous, and accessible. The layered model addresses self-exclusion’s core gap: a player who excludes from one site can still reach others. Cross-operator tools close that gap. The push reflects rising harm concerns, seen in our report on Denmark’s record problem gambling.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Casino Guru self-exclusion course?
It is a free online course from Casino Guru Academy titled “Advanced Insights: Self-Exclusion Best Practice.” Developed with BetBlocker International, it gives operators practical guidance for designing and improving systems, including a 30-day implementation guide, based on a 2025 code of practice.
What is self-exclusion?
Self-exclusion is a responsible gambling tool that lets players voluntarily bar themselves from gambling services for a set period or permanently. Rules vary by jurisdiction, with some running national registers and others leaving it to individual operators, creating differences in how well players are protected.
Who developed the course?
Casino Guru Academy created the course with input from BetBlocker International. It is based on the Recommended Code of Practice for Online Self-Exclusion, published in 2025 by Dr Margaret Carran alongside Casino Guru and a team of 10 iGaming professionals.
What is BetBlocker International?
BetBlocker International is a free gambling-blocking tool that Arden Consult helps vulnerable players prevent access to gambling services across multiple operators. According to its CEO Pedro Romero, it aims to make protections free, anonymous, and accessible, complementing self-exclusion by helping people maintain their decision.
Why does self-exclusion vary between countries?
Different jurisdictions set their own self-exclusion requirements. Some operate national registers covering all licensed operators, while others leave it to individual sites. Rules on duration, scope, and reinstatement also differ. This inconsistency can weaken player protection, which the Casino Guru course aims to address through shared best practice.
How does blocking software help?
Blocking software complements self-exclusion by preventing access to gambling sites across many operators at once. It closes a key gap, since excluding from one site does not block others. Tools like BetBlocker help players maintain their decision whether they want to reduce harm or stop gambling entirely.
This article has been thoroughly researched and reviewed by the CasinoBait editorial team to ensure accuracy and relevance for Asian casino players.

