EveryMatrix Targets Bonus Leakage With AI-Led Fraud Controls
The product, launched in December 2025 and now being positioned more aggressively in operator-facing coverage, sits inside the supplier’s BonusEngine and EngageSuite stack and focuses on behavioural signals that older rule-based checks often miss.
EveryMatrix says bonus abuse now accounts for more than 63% of detected iGaming fraud, while 83% of operators reported rising fraud in 2024. In the European market, the supplier and its cited industry data put annual losses linked to bonus abuse at roughly $5bn, based on a sector value of $58bn and leakage equal to 10% to 20% of turnover or promotional spend, depending on the reference point used in the source material.
EveryMatrix’s pitch is that Bonus Guardian works inside the bonusing layer rather than beside it. The tool analyses player activity across thousands of patterns, learns from real-time data, and supports role-based actions such as bonus exclusion, withdrawal holds, and manual escalation.
For operators, the real issue is margin control. Fraud rings now use synthetic identities, automated account creation, device masking, rotating payment methods, and slower betting patterns designed to look ordinary. That weakens the value of basic IP checks, isolated account reviews, and campaign-by-campaign manual rules, especially for casino brands that rely heavily on bonuses to keep acquisition costs in line.
TGJ Take
Bonus Guardian matters as it treats bonus abuse as lost revenue, not only a fraud issue. Operators that still rely on manual checks often miss the real cost of promotions and overstate campaign results. Suppliers that connect fraud controls with bonus logic have a clearer offer for 2026, as operators look for tools that act on the problem, not just report it.