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By Austin Taylor · Founder, Cope CompassLast updated May 6, 2026

Best Digital Tools for Gambling Treatment in 2026

The landscape of gambling treatment technology has changed dramatically. Insurance companies are asking for outcome data. Patients expect between-session support. Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM) codes are creating new revenue streams. If you treat gambling disorder and your toolkit is still limited to worksheets and weekly sessions, you are falling behind. Here is what is available and what actually works.

The CaseWhy Digital Tools Matter Now

39%of gambling disorder clients drop out of treatment, higher than substance use disorders

Gambling disorder has a treatment dropout rate of 39%, higher than substance use disorders. The primary reason is not clinical failure. It is between-session disengagement. Your client leaves your office motivated, and 167 hours later they walk back in having relapsed. The gap between sessions is where recovery is won or lost.

Digital tools fill that gap. The evidence is clear:

Internet-delivered CBT for gambling disorder is non-inferior to face-to-face therapy for treatment completion and symptom reduction. — Carlbring et al., 2012
The question is no longer whether to use digital tools. It is which ones.

The CriteriaWhat to Look For in a Gambling Treatment Tool

Not all apps are equal. Before evaluating specific platforms, here are the criteria that matter for clinical use:

Between-session intervention capability. Can the tool help a client in the moment of an urge — at 2am, during an NFL game, when they get a deposit match notification? The evidence for between-session CBT tools is strong. Or is it just a journaling app?

Clinically relevant data. Does it track information you can actually use in session? Urge frequency, time-of-day patterns, trigger contexts, intervention completion rates, stability trends?

RTM billing compatibility. Does the platform generate the structured data trail that payers require for CPT 98978/98980/98981 reimbursement? For a step-by-step walkthrough, see our guide to billing RTM for gambling disorder. This is increasingly a financial necessity.

Safety features. Escalation alerts, crisis resources, sponsor/support system integration. Gambling crises can escalate to financial ruin and suicidality — the tool must account for this. See gambling treatment technology in 2026 for a broader view of the regulatory and investment landscape driving these requirements.

Ease of adoption. If your client will not use it, it does not matter how good it is. The tool needs to be simple enough to use in a crisis moment with impaired executive function.

Tool OneCope Compass

What it is: Real-time gambling recovery platform with intervention engine, counter-programming against casino hooks, peer sponsor system, and between-session monitoring.

Key features:

  • Orb intervention system — guided breathing (4-3-6 pattern) and grounding sequences triggered by emotional state. Clinically informed by CBT and just-in-time adaptive intervention (JITAI) research.
  • Counter-programming engine — maps the exact timing of gambling platform hooks (midnight bonus resets, Monday reloads, NFL Sunday pushes, near-miss notifications) and sends recovery support at those moments.
  • Morning and evening rituals — 16 prescriptive daily plans based on morning state, evening reflection with outcome tracking.
  • Sponsor matching — scored applications with admin review, capacity management, escalation system.
  • Progress dashboard — stability scores, state patterns, time-of-day analysis, weekly summaries.
  • Apple Watch app — orb intervention with haptic breathing, accessible on the wrist during high-risk moments.
RTM billing: Collects the timestamped clinical data needed for Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (CPT 98975-98981) — intervention usage, stability scores, compliance tracking. Provider RTM reporting features are in development (Q3 2026).

Cost: Free for patients. Basic directory listing is always free for providers; the first 50 to join get Founder status (profile badge, priority placement, custom hero banner, and lifetime comp on any future paid premium tier).

Best for: Providers who want real-time between-session monitoring with counter-programming against specific gambling platform tactics. The counter-programming angle is unique — no other tool maps casino engagement schedules and fights back at those exact times.

Website: copecompass.com/providers/partner

Tool TwoBirches Health

What it is: Virtual gambling treatment clinic offering therapy, medication management, and peer support via telehealth.

Key features: Licensed therapist matching, group therapy sessions, medication-assisted treatment (naltrexone), peer coaching, financial counseling referrals.

RTM billing: Not applicable — Birches is a treatment provider, not a monitoring tool. They bill E/M codes directly.

Cost: Insurance-based. Accepts multiple commercial plans.

Best for: Providers looking to refer patients to a dedicated virtual gambling clinic rather than adding tools to their own practice.

Tool ThreeGambling Therapy (Gordon Moody Association)

What it is: Free online support service for gambling addiction operated by the Gordon Moody Association with international reach.

Key features: Online support groups, self-help resources, multilingual forums, email counseling.

RTM billing: Not compatible. No structured clinical data output.

Cost: Free.

Best for: International clients, clients who cannot afford treatment, supplementary community support alongside clinical care.

Access BlockersGamban / BetBlocker

What they are: Software-based gambling site blocking tools that prevent access to online gambling platforms across devices.

Key features: Block 50,000+ gambling websites and apps, cross-device protection (desktop, mobile, tablet), difficult to circumvent.

RTM billing: Not applicable. These are blocking tools, not monitoring platforms.

Cost: Gamban: $3-5/month. BetBlocker: Free.

Best for: Harm reduction as part of a broader treatment plan. Effective as a first step or relapse prevention layer. Recommend alongside clinical treatment, not as standalone intervention.

Tool FiveBetterStop

What it is: CBT-based gambling recovery program delivered through a mobile app with structured modules.

Key features: 8-week structured program, cognitive restructuring exercises, urge tracking, financial planning tools, daily check-ins.

RTM billing: Limited. Tracks engagement but may not generate the structured data payers require.

Cost: Subscription-based.

Best for: Clients who respond well to structured, self-paced CBT programs and do not need real-time crisis intervention.

Side By SideHow These Tools Compare

FeatureCope CompassBirches HealthGambling TherapyGamban/BetBlockerBetterStop
Real-time interventionYesNo (scheduled sessions)NoNoNo
Counter-programmingYesNoNoNoNo
RTM billing supportComing Q3 2026N/A (is the provider)NoNoLimited
Peer sponsor systemYesPeer coachingForumsNoNo
Apple WatchYesNoNoNoNo
Cost to providerFree (Founder status for first 50)Referral onlyFreeN/AN/A
Cost to patientFreeInsuranceFree$3-5/moSubscription
Crisis escalationYesYesEmail onlyNoNo
Between-session dataFull dashboardSession notesNoBlocking logsModule completion

Where To StartThe Between-Session Gap Is the Opportunity

The gambling treatment tools that will define the next decade are not the ones that replicate what you already do in session. They are the ones that fill the 167 hours between sessions — the hours where gambling platforms are spending billions to pull your clients back.

The counter-programming approach — sending recovery support at the exact times gambling apps send their hooks — represents a fundamentally different model. Instead of waiting for the client to reach out when they are already in crisis, the tool anticipates the crisis before it happens.

If you treat gambling disorder, the question is not whether your clients need between-session support. They do. The question is whether that support will come from you — or from DraftKings.

For providers interested in adding between-session monitoring to their practice, visit copecompass.com/providers/partner. Basic listing is always free; first 50 join as Founders.

Sources

  • Carlbring, P. et al. (2012). "Internet vs. face-to-face cognitive behavior therapy for pathological gambling." Journal of Gambling Studies, 28(4), 445-458.
  • Hodgins, D. C. & el-Guebaly, N. (2010). "The influence of substance dependence and mood disorders on outcome from pathological gambling." Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 198(2), 144-149.
  • American Medical Association. (2023). CPT Code Set — Remote Therapeutic Monitoring. Codes 98975-98981.
  • Gainsbury, S. M. et al. (2015). "A digital revolution: Comparison of demographic profiles, attitudes and gambling behavior of Internet and non-Internet gamblers." Computers in Human Behavior, 50, 388-396.

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