A loss limit is one of the simplest session-discipline tools: you decide in advance the maximum amount you are willing to lose in a single session, and you stop when you reach it. No exceptions.
Our Loss Limit Calculator models a worst-case scenario: how many consecutive losing bets your limit allows, how many sessions your bankroll survives if you hit the limit every time, and the difference between capped and uncapped play.
Loss Limit Calculator
Stop-Loss ToolHow to Use the Loss Limit Calculator
- Enter your bankroll: Total funds available for gambling.
- Set your loss limit: The maximum you will lose in a single session. A common guideline is 10-20% of your total bankroll.
- Enter your bet size: How much per round.
- Enter sessions per month: How often you play.
- Read the comparison: The calculator shows side-by-side: without a session stop-loss (downside uncapped up to the full bankroll) vs. with your limit (capped per session). It also shows how many sessions your bankroll survives at worst-case and whether your limit percentage is conservative, moderate, or aggressive.
Why Loss Limits Work
A session loss limit does not change the house edge or variance. What it does change is your maximum planned loss for a single visit.
Without a session stop-loss, your downside is uncapped — a bad night could consume most or all of your bankroll. With a limit, the worst outcome in any single session is losing the limit amount. Your bankroll survives to play another day.
The math is straightforward: if your bankroll is $1,000 and your session limit is $100, you have at least 10 worst-case sessions before the bankroll is gone. Without a limit, a single disastrous session could end it.
Example: $1,000 Bankroll, $10 Bets, 8 Sessions/Month
| No Limit | $200 Limit | $100 Limit | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bets before stop | 100 (full bankroll) | 20 | 10 |
| Max loss per session | $1,000 | $200 | $100 |
| Sessions to survive (worst case) | 1 | 5 | 10 |
| Max monthly loss | $1,000 | $1,600 | $800 |
Note: the $200 limit × 8 sessions = $1,600, which exceeds the $1,000 bankroll. This means in practice you would run out of money before 8 worst-case sessions. The calculator flags this.
How to Choose Your Limit
These are session-level budgeting heuristics, not universal bankroll rules. Adjust based on how frequently you play and how easily you can replenish.
- 10% of bankroll: Conservative. Gives you 10+ worst-case sessions. Suitable for frequent players who want long-term sustainability.
- 20% of bankroll: Moderate. Gives about 5 worst-case sessions. Reasonable if you play infrequently.
- Over 30%: Aggressive. A single bad session takes a large chunk of your bankroll. Only appropriate if you can easily replenish and are comfortable with the risk.
The key is to set the limit before you start playing, while you are thinking rationally — not after a losing streak when emotions are running high.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What if I hit my limit early in the session?
Stop. That is the entire point. A loss limit only works if you follow it without exception. If you hit your limit in 20 minutes, the session is over. Walk away, and come back another day with a fresh session and a fresh limit.
Should I also set a win limit?
Win limits are more controversial than loss limits. Some players find them helpful for locking in profits and avoiding the temptation to “give it all back.” Others argue that walking away during a winning session reduces expected value if you have an edge. For recreational players, a win limit (e.g., “stop if I double my buy-in”) is a reasonable discipline tool.
Do online casinos offer built-in loss limits?
Many regulated online casinos offer deposit limits, session limits, and loss limits as part of their responsible gambling tools. Setting these through the casino system is stronger than relying on willpower alone, because the system enforces the limit automatically. Use this calculator to determine the right number, then apply it through your casino’s settings.
Does a loss limit change the house edge or expected value?
No. A loss limit does not affect the game’s mathematics. The house edge stays the same regardless of whether you set a limit. What the limit changes is your maximum exposure per session — it caps the downside, not the expected cost per bet.
Is a loss limit the same as bankroll management?
A loss limit is one part of bankroll management, but not the whole picture. Full bankroll management also includes bet sizing, game selection, and long-term planning. A session loss limit is a simple discipline layer that protects against the worst single-session outcome.
Assumptions & Limitations
- This calculator models worst-case scenarios: consecutive losses until the limit is reached. Real sessions mix wins and losses, so actual results will vary.
- The “sessions to survive” metric assumes you hit the loss limit every single session — an extreme worst case.
- This is a session-discipline planner, not a full bankroll management system. It does not account for game-specific variance, win probability, or deposit/withdrawal patterns.
- Mental limits are weaker than programmatic limits. Where possible, use your casino’s built-in responsible gambling tools to enforce the limit automatically.
Important: If gambling is causing financial or emotional stress, please seek help. This calculator is designed as a budgeting tool, not a therapy substitute. National resources: NCPG (US) | GamCare (UK).
