HengOngBet Blog
HengOngBet How to Set Gambling Limits in Malaysia Before You Need To
Most gambling guides only mention limits when things have already gone wrong. By then, a bad habit has already taken root.
The smarter move is to set your limits on day one — when you’re calm, clear-headed, and not chasing a loss. It takes about three minutes and can prevent months of financial stress. Here’s exactly how to do it.
1. Why Malaysian Players Skip This Step (And Pay For It Later)
Setting limits feels like admitting you might have a problem. It doesn’t feel that way at all — it’s what experienced players do to stay in the game long-term.
The World Health Organisation estimates 1.2% of the world’s adult population has a gambling disorder, and the broader harm from gambling — financial, emotional, family — affects roughly six other people for every one person gambling at risky levels. That’s not a small number.
Closer to home, The Star reported in 2024 that around 4.4% of Malaysia’s adult population engages in high-severity problem gambling — higher than many neighbouring countries. And according to Bernama in April 2026, the MCMC received over 203,000 takedown requests in the first few months of 2026, with 61% related to online gambling alone.
None of those statistics describe someone who set responsible limits from the start.
If you enjoy online casino games as entertainment — a RM50 session here and there — limits are simply the seatbelt you put on before driving. Not because you plan to crash, but because you’re sensible.
Register at HengOngBet now and set your limits during registration — it takes 60 seconds.
2. The 4 Types of Limits You Should Know About
1. Deposit Limits
The most practical control. You decide: daily, weekly, or monthly — how much money can enter your casino account.
Real MYR example: Set a monthly deposit limit of RM200. Once that RM200 is deposited — no matter what happens in your sessions — the platform blocks further deposits until the next calendar month. Even if you’ve lost it all in day one and desperately want to top up, you can’t.
This is the limit that actually prevents financial damage, because it cuts off the supply before the spiral starts.
How to set it:
Go to Account Settings → Responsible Gaming
Select “Deposit Limit”
Choose your time period and enter your amount
Confirm — limits usually activate instantly
Important: Most platforms let you lower your deposit limit immediately, but increasing it requires a cooling-off period (usually 24–72 hours). That delay is intentional — it gives you time to reconsider.
2. Loss Limits
A loss limit works differently from a deposit limit. It tracks how much you’ve lost in a session or period — and stops you when you hit that threshold, even if you still have funds in your account.
Real MYR example: Set a RM100 weekly loss limit. If you deposit RM300 but lose RM100 across your sessions that week, the platform locks you out of further play until the limit resets — even though you still have RM200 sitting there.
Loss limits are powerful precisely because they stop you at the moment emotions run highest: when you’re down and tempted to chase.
3. Session / Time Limits
Set a maximum session duration — 30 minutes, 1 hour — and the platform will notify you or end your session when you hit it.
This one matters more than players expect. The “just one more spin” feeling is real and studied. A time cap removes that decision entirely.
4. Self-Exclusion
The most serious tool. Self-exclusion lets you block your own account for a chosen period — 7 days, 30 days, 6 months, or permanently.
Once activated, you cannot log in, deposit, or play for the duration. Reputable platforms prevent re-registration during this period too.
When to use it: If you’ve had two or more sessions where you deposited more than you planned, or felt genuinely distressed about losses — don’t wait for a third. Use the cooling-off period (short self-exclusion) first, and see how you feel.
This is not failure. This is what the tool is for.
3.The One Mistake Most Players Make With Limits
They set limits too high to matter.
A deposit limit of RM2,000 per month means nothing if your actual entertainment budget is RM150. The limit should be calibrated to your real life, not your best-case optimism.
Practical formula:
- Take your monthly entertainment budget (movies, food, leisure — everything)
- Decide what percentage feels comfortable for casino games — most experienced Malaysian players say 10–20%
- Set that as your monthly deposit limit
If your entertainment budget is RM300 and you’re comfortable spending 15% on casino games, that’s RM45 per month. Set RM45. It won’t feel like much — it shouldn’t. That’s the point.
Claim your free welcome bonus at HengOngBet — the platform’s responsible gaming section is accessible from your account dashboard on day one.
4. Signs You Should Use Self-Exclusion, Not Just a Deposit Limit
Deposit and loss limits work well when gambling is genuinely entertainment. If any of the following apply, move straight to self-exclusion:
- You’ve borrowed money (from anyone) to fund gambling
- You’ve hidden deposits or wins/losses from family
- You felt anxious, angry, or empty after losing — not just disappointed
- You increased your bets specifically to win back losses
- You’ve thought about gambling during work, sleep, or family time
These aren’t character flaws. They’re recognised behavioural patterns. The appropriate response is a break — and self-exclusion enforces that break better than willpower alone.
If you’re in Malaysia and looking for support, Befrienders KL (+603 7956 8145) and Talian Kasih 15999 (operated by KPWKM) offer free, confidential support in Bahasa Malaysia and English.
Frequently Asked Questions
If I self-exclude, do I lose my winnings?
Are my gambling limits visible to other people or reported to the government?
Can I set gambling limits on my mobile while playing?