Why Ontario Sports Betting Has a Seasonal Rhythm
Ontario's regulated iGaming market does not operate at uniform intensity year-round. Total wager volume, GGR, active player counts, and average revenue per account all follow predictable seasonal patterns driven primarily by the North American sports calendar. Understanding those patterns matters for bettors, operators, and anyone interpreting the monthly iGO data.
For bettors, seasonality affects two things directly: promotion availability and odds competitiveness. Books compete most aggressively during peak seasons when they are fighting for maximum share of a larger wagering pool. Welcome bonuses, enhanced odds, and reload promotions cluster around NFL launch in September, the full NFL regular season through January, and the NHL and NBA playoff windows. Off-season months see reduced promotional activity as operators have less incentive to chase volume.
For anyone reading the iGO monthly market reports, seasonality provides the essential context for interpreting whether a given month's GGR figure is strong or weak. A $300M GGR month in June is a strong result. The same $300M in November would be below trend. Without seasonal benchmarks, raw monthly figures can be misleading.
Ontario Betting Seasonality: Month-by-Month Average Wager Volume
The grid below shows average wager volume by calendar month across all 46 months of iGO data. Bar height is proportional to average volume. Hover for full metrics.
Complete Seasonal Metrics: Wagers, GGR, Hold Rate, and ARPPA
| Month | Avg Wagers | Avg GGR | Avg Hold | Avg ARPPA | Avg Players |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan Peak | $287.8M | 4.08% | $287 | 991k | |
| Feb | $214.8M | 3.74% | $235 | 906k | |
| Mar | $242.9M | 3.83% | $286 | 855k | |
| Apr | $199.2M | 4.02% | $250 | 739k | |
| May | $207.8M | 4.03% | $277 | 706k | |
| Jun | $192.2M | 3.96% | $270 | 677k | |
| Jul | $197.8M | 3.96% | $297 | 644k | |
| Aug | $208.5M | 4.06% | $308 | 658k | |
| Sep | $227.5M | 4.11% | $278 | 803k | |
| Oct | $245.7M | 3.91% | $274 | 884k | |
| Nov | $270.2M | 4.09% | $290 | 921k | |
| Dec | $271.2M | 3.83% | $285 | 934k |
Ontario Sports Betting Through Four Distinct Seasons
Peak Season: October through January
The four-month window from October to January is the strongest period in the Ontario betting calendar by every metric. Average wager volume across these months runs between $6.3B and $7.0B, representing the densest overlap of major North American sports. The full NFL regular season, NHL opening months, NBA tip-off, and international football leagues at peak engagement all compete for bettor attention simultaneously.
October historically marks the inflection point where volume accelerates. NFL Week 5 through 10 drives significant same-game parlay activity, and the NHL and NBA openings attract casual bettors who are less active during summer. December and January capture the NFL playoff push and the Super Bowl buildup, which is the single highest-volume sports betting event of the year.
Hold rates during this window are somewhat variable — December frequently shows the lowest hold of any month as a result of high parlay activity and NFL upset volatility — but absolute GGR is consistently the highest of any four-month period. The quarterly review confirms that Q3 (Oct-Dec) is Ontario's strongest fiscal quarter every year.
Strong Secondary: February and March
February and March form a strong secondary peak despite February showing the lowest average ARPPA of any month. The explanation is that the Super Bowl generates a wave of new account registrations in late January and early February, temporarily increasing the active account count with casual bettors who inflate the denominator for ARPPA calculations without contributing proportionate GGR. Total wager volume remains elevated because major league basketball and hockey are both in full swing, and March Madness generates one of the highest single-event betting volumes of the calendar year.
Off-Season: April through June
The three-month window from April through June represents Ontario's consistent soft season. Average wager volume drops to $4.8B-$5.1B, roughly 30% below the October-January peak. The NFL off-season removes the market's primary volume driver, the NHL and NBA playoffs generate some activity but attract a narrower audience than regular season play across all sports simultaneously, and MLB has not yet built momentum.
This is the period when operators reduce promotional intensity. Welcome bonus values and reload offer frequency typically contract in May and June as books manage acquisition costs against lower expected lifetime value from new accounts registered outside peak season. For bettors who bet year-round, this period often offers the least competitive promotional environment.
The Summer Paradox: July and August
July and August produce a counterintuitive result that appears consistently in the data: ARPPA peaks in August at $308 on average, higher than any other calendar month, despite July and August recording some of the lowest active player counts of the year.
The explanation is compositional. When casual bettors disengage in summer, the accounts that remain active are disproportionately high-value: casino regulars, year-round sports bettors, and poker players who maintain their habits regardless of the sports calendar. With the denominator (active accounts) shrinking while the numerator (GGR from core players) holds relatively stable, ARPPA rises. This is not a sign of increased individual spending but a reflection of who is left in the pool. The ARPPA report explores this dynamic in full detail.
What Ontario Seasonality Means for Bettors in Practice
Seasonality has three direct practical implications for Ontario bettors.
Best time to open new accounts: September and October, when NFL and NHL both launch simultaneously. This is when operators invest most heavily in new account acquisition and offer their most competitive welcome packages. The promotional environment is meaningfully better than June or July. If you have been considering opening a new book account, the autumn window consistently delivers the best terms.
Best time to find value: early in each major sports season, before sharp money and public betting have moved lines efficiently. The first two weeks of the NFL season historically show higher variance in line quality as books are calibrating to new rosters, coaching changes, and early-season sample sizes. Experienced bettors exploit this window. Later in the season, lines become tighter and harder to beat.
When to expect tighter margins: peak season also means peak competition, which paradoxically means some books price more aggressively to win volume. Checking the Ontario hold rate data monthly tells you whether the market is running high or low margin in any given period. For books ranked by everyday vig, see the sportsbook reviews.