The Clubhouse Casino cookie policy: what’s actually tracking you and why it matters
I’ve spent the better part of a decade reviewing online casinos across Australia, and if there’s one page that players consistently skip, it’s the cookie policy. I get it — nobody wakes up excited to read about HTTP cookies. But after a conversation with a mate who was genuinely shocked to find out a casino site had been tracking his session data for weeks, I decided it was time to write something honest and readable about how this all works at The Clubhouse Casino. So here it is, written the way I wish someone had explained it to me.
What cookies actually are (and aren’t)
Let me clear something up right away. Cookies are not spyware. They’re not viruses. They’re small text files that a website stores on your device when you visit. That’s it. Your browser saves them locally, and the site can read them back on your next visit to remember things — like that you’re already logged in, or that you had A$50 in your account balance when you last closed the tab.
The Clubhouse Casino uses cookies the same way most legitimate gambling platforms do: to keep the site functional, personalise your experience, and gather anonymised data to improve the platform. None of that is sinister, though it is worth understanding what you’re agreeing to when you click “accept” on that consent banner.
Types of cookies used at The Clubhouse Casino
Here’s where it gets practical. Not all cookies are equal, and The Clubhouse Casino uses several distinct categories, each with a different purpose.
| Cookie type | Purpose | Duration |
| Strictly necessary | Login sessions, security tokens, cart/balance data | Session or up to 1 year |
| Functional | Language preferences, region settings (AUS), saved game filters | Up to 2 years |
| Analytics | Page views, session length, bounce rate (via tools like Google Analytics) | Up to 2 years |
| Marketing/targeting | Ad personalisation, affiliate tracking, retargeting | Up to 2 years |
- Strictly necessary cookies are non-negotiable. If you block these, the site simply won’t work. When you log in to your Clubhouse Casino account, a session cookie keeps you authenticated as you move between the lobby, the cashier, and the live dealer tables. Without it, you’d be logged out every time you clicked a link.
- Functional cookies are the ones that remember your preferences. If you’ve set your display to show games in A$ and filtered the lobby to show only pokies, those settings are stored here. They’re not essential to basic function, but they make the experience significantly more comfortable — especially if you’re a regular player who doesn’t want to reconfigure everything on every visit.
- Analytics cookies collect aggregated, anonymised data about how people use the site. Think: how long players spend on the live casino page, which game categories get the most clicks, where users tend to drop off during registration. The Clubhouse Casino uses this data to make decisions about the platform — which games to promote, how to structure the lobby, whether the deposit flow is confusing people. You’re a data point in a much larger picture, and your individual behaviour is never exposed.
- Marketing cookies are the ones that follow you around the web. You’ve seen it before — you visit a casino site, and then ads for it appear on your news feed for the next fortnight. That’s retargeting, and it works through third-party marketing cookies. The Clubhouse Casino partners with advertising networks to run these campaigns, and those cookies are placed by external providers, not the casino itself.
Third-party cookies: who else is in the room
This is the part most people don’t think about. When you visit The Clubhouse Casino, it’s not just the casino’s own code running on the page. Third-party services load scripts and cookies too. Common examples include:
- Google Analytics — session and behaviour tracking
- Google Tag Manager — manages which tracking scripts fire
- Facebook Pixel — conversion tracking for social media advertising
- Affiliate tracking platforms — records how you arrived at the site (e.g., through a review link)
- Payment processors — may set session cookies for fraud prevention
Each of these third parties has its own privacy policy and data practices. The Clubhouse Casino is obligated under Australian privacy law — specifically the Privacy Act 1988 and the Australian Privacy Principles (APPs) — to be transparent about these relationships. Their cookie policy should list which third parties have access and link to relevant disclosures.
Your rights as an Australian player
Australian consumer and privacy law gives you meaningful rights when it comes to data. Under the Privacy Act, The Clubhouse Casino (if it meets the turnover threshold or handles sensitive information) must:
- Tell you what personal data is collected and why
- Give you access to the data they hold about you
- Allow you to correct inaccurate information
- Not use your data for purposes beyond what was disclosed
In practice, your main lever when it comes to cookies is consent management. The Clubhouse Casino’s consent banner (that popup you see on first visit) should let you accept all cookies, reject non-essential ones, or customise your preferences by category. If you later change your mind, you can typically revisit those settings through a “cookie preferences” link in the site footer.
| Browser | Where to manage cookies |
| Chrome | Settings → Privacy and security → Cookies and other site data |
| Firefox | Settings → Privacy & Security → Cookies and Site Data |
| Safari | Preferences → Privacy → Manage Website Data |
| Edge | Settings → Cookies and site permissions |
Clearing cookies will log you out of The Clubhouse Casino and reset any saved preferences. It won’t delete your account or affect your balance — that data lives on the casino’s servers, not your device.
Session cookies vs persistent cookies
One distinction worth understanding: some cookies only last for your browsing session (they disappear when you close the browser), while others persist on your device for weeks, months, or even years.
- Session cookies handle your active login and game state. When I’m mid-session on a pokie or at a blackjack table, session cookies are quietly keeping track of what’s happening. Close the browser, they’re gone.
- Persistent cookies are the ones that remember you next time. Your login preferences, your accepted cookie settings, your affiliate source — these stick around until they expire or you manually delete them. The Clubhouse Casino’s persistent cookies typically run for up to two years, which is standard across the industry.
How cookie data is stored and protected
The Clubhouse Casino stores cookie-related data in compliance with Australian data protection standards. Cookie data itself sits on your local device, but the analytics and session data it generates may be transmitted to and stored on servers. Key protections include:
- SSL/TLS encryption on all data in transit
- Anonymisation of analytics data before storage
- No sale of personal data to third parties for their own marketing use
- Data retention limits in line with regulatory requirements
The casino is licensed and regulated, which means it’s subject to audit. Regulators can and do review data handling practices, so there’s real accountability behind these commitments — not just a legal disclaimer.
A note on responsible gambling and cookies
Here’s something I find genuinely interesting from a player welfare perspective: cookies can actually support responsible gambling features. When The Clubhouse Casino remembers your deposit limit settings or self-exclusion status, that’s functional cookie data working in your favour. Some platforms use session data to flag unusual play patterns and trigger responsible gambling prompts. It’s one of the less-discussed but genuinely useful applications of on-site tracking.
If you’ve set any responsible gambling tools on your account — session time limits, deposit caps, reality checks — these are stored server-side, not in a cookie. Clearing your browser cookies won’t reset these safeguards. That’s an important distinction.