
By Tatiana Martins, journalist at G&M News.
When households tighten their belts, one might expect all discretionary entertainment to take a hit: yet the online gambling and iGaming sector shows surprising resilience. In an era of inflation, geopolitical unrest and economic turbulence, the way consumers bet, spend and engage is changing. Understanding how this sector behaves in hardship is key for operators, regulators and investors alike.
Economic headwinds and changing betting behavior
Periods of inflation, war or shrinking middle incomes trigger three core shifts in consumer behavior: reduced discretionary budgets, higher financial anxiety and greater search for low-cost entertainment. According to research, while overall household spending drops, gambling does not always follow the same pattern:
- A study of U.S. gambling consumption from 1959-2010 found that lottery spending appeared largely recession-proof, while casino expenditures grew during expansions but stagnated in recessions.
- As inflation rose in late 2022, mobile sports betting engagement dropped from 19% in Q2 to 11% in Q4. These findings underline that iGaming is neither fully immune nor uniformly affected, its resilience depends on product type, geography and consumer profile.
Why iGaming may fare better than some forms of entertainment
- Lower cost / higher convenience
Online casinos and sports betting platforms typically require less time, travel and liquidity than, say, a cinema outing or live concert. That makes them attractive when budgets shrink.
- Continuous product offering
As the consultancy Global Betting & Gaming Consultants (GBGC) notes, the sports betting segment stayed more resilient partly because high-profile events and constant live-betting opportunities kept engagement active, even when the economy faltered.
- Rapid adaptation and promotion
Operators often shift strategy under strain: reducing minimum bets, targeting loyalty offers, focusing on lower-stakes games, thus keeping users active albeit at lower spend levels. For example, one trade article noted that during downturns “operators switch to value-driven offers, including promotions with low minimum bets.
- Substitution effect
When expensive leisure (travel, live events) is cut, some consumers redirect spending into more accessible online experiences. The iGaming industry may benefit from this substitution rather than pure growth.
Not all segments thrive equally
Even if the broader iGaming sector shows staying power, key caveats apply:
- Product type matters: Traditional land-based casinos with high overheads and travel costs are often hit hard in downturns, while online games remain more flexible. For example, the GBGC found that casino revenues in France fell more than GDP in the 2008 downturn (-6.9% vs -2.7%).
- Consumer segments vary: High-value bettors are more volatile. During inflationary times many reduce stakes; some even dip into savings or credit to sustain habits.
- Geography and regulation: Markets already stressed by inflation, currency volatility or war may see stronger effects. For example, one regional study noted players shift to lower-stakes games under economic strain in the UK.
- Margin pressure on operators: Inflation affects not just consumer spend, but costs for operators (marketing, payments, compliance). The 2024 stock-market crash analysis for iGaming reported reduced deposits and lower player activity in some regions.
Patterns emerging in economic uncertainty
- Smaller stakes, more frequent engagements: Instead of fewer large bets, players often shift to lower-value bets to manage risk.
- Greater reliance on loyal, high-income groups: Operators increasingly focus on retention rather than acquisition during downturns, as new player recruitment becomes costlier and more uncertain.
- Product mix shift: Promotional games, “freemium” formats, lower-cost variants and loyalty-driven offers gain prominence. One study noted that in downturns “low-stakes games and freemium options are leading the market.”
- Responsible-gambling pressure rises: With more consumers under financial strain, risk of problem gambling increases. Thus, operators must integrate stronger RG safeguards and affordability checks.
Strategic implications for operators & stakeholders
- Diversify geographies and product lines: Relying on one region or high-stakes bets exposes operators to downturn risk.
- Focus on retention and value rather than aggressive acquisition: In uncertain times, retaining reliable players and reducing churn becomes more cost-effective.
- Adapt affordably: Design game portfolios that cater to lower bet thresholds, extend loyalty benefits, and provide engaging experiences without high spending.
- Strengthen responsible gaming frameworks: Economic stress increases vulnerability. Proactive monitoring, affordability tools and outreach become regulatory and ethical priorities.
- Maintain operational agility: Cost discipline, flexible marketing, tech scalability and real-time analytics support resilience when the market tightens.
The question of whether iGaming is truly “crisis-proof” lacks a simple yes/no answer. What the evidence does show, however, is that the sector often offers more resilience than many forms of entertainment, thanks to its accessibility, technology-driven delivery and ability to adapt. That resilience is conditional: product mix, consumer segment, geography and operator strategy all matter.
Against a backdrop of inflation, war and global uncertainty, the standout operators will be those who recognize behavior shifts, optimize for engagement at lower spend levels, and embed responsible gaming safeguards as part of their growth strategy. For other suppliers, regulators and investors, the key insight is clear: iGaming won’t remain unaffected in a downturn, but its structural advantages give it an edge if entrepreneurs and policy makers play the cards right.







