Popular Payment Methods
Three Things Every UK Player Should Know
No Credit Cards — It's the Law
Since April 2020, UK casinos cannot accept credit card deposits. This UKGC regulation exists to prevent players from gambling with borrowed money. Debit cards, e-wallets, and prepaid options are your alternatives. All casinos on our recommended list support multiple deposit methods.
Verify Your ID Early
Every UK casino must confirm your identity before your first withdrawal. Upload your photo ID and proof of address when you register — not when you're waiting to cash out. Most verifications clear within 24 hours if submitted upfront.
E-Wallets Win on Speed
If fast cashouts matter to you — and they should — use PayPal, Skrill, or Neteller. Withdrawals land within 24 hours, often sooner. Debit cards take 1-3 business days. Bank transfers are the slowest option at 3-5 days.
Payment Mistakes to Avoid
Getting money in and out of a casino should be straightforward. These mistakes make it harder:
- Waiting until withdrawal to verify your identity — KYC checks can take 24-72 hours. Complete verification right after registration so your first withdrawal is not delayed
- Depositing with one method, expecting to withdraw with another — most casinos require you to withdraw to the same method you deposited with, at least up to the deposit amount
- Ignoring minimum withdrawal limits — some methods have higher minimums (bank transfers often £20+). Check before you deposit to avoid having winnings stuck below the threshold
- Using bank transfers when e-wallets are available — bank transfers take 3-5 working days. PayPal and Skrill typically process within hours. Choose speed when you can
- Not keeping ID documents current — expired passports or out-of-date proof of address will fail verification. Keep documents ready and up to date
- Forgetting about pending periods — many casinos hold withdrawals for 24-48 hours in a "pending" state. During this time you can reverse the withdrawal — which is a responsible gambling concern. Disable reverse-withdrawal if your casino offers the option
Payments FAQ
PayPal. In our testing, PayPal withdrawals consistently arrive fastest — often within a few hours. Skrill and Neteller are close behind at under 24 hours. Some newer casinos now offer truly instant e-wallet withdrawals with no pending period.
No reputable UK casino charges fees on either end. If a site charges you to deposit or withdraw, consider it a warning sign. Your payment provider may have its own fees (especially for bank transfers), but the casino itself should never take a cut.
It's a legal requirement, not a delay tactic. KYC verification prevents fraud, money laundering, and underage gambling. You'll need photo ID (passport or driving licence) and proof of address (utility bill or bank statement). Submit these when you register and your first withdrawal will process without a hitch.
No. The UK Gambling Commission banned credit-card gambling deposits on 14 April 2020 across all UKGC-licensed sites. Debit cards, e-wallets (PayPal, Skrill, Neteller), Apple Pay, Google Pay, Open Banking, and bank transfer are all permitted.
Open Banking lets you authorise a payment from your bank app directly to the casino, with no card details shared. Providers like Trustly and Tink are FCA-authorised and use bank-grade authentication. Increasingly the fastest deposit method at our top-rated sites.
PayPal is a closed-loop e-wallet — once the casino approves, the funds appear instantly in your PayPal balance. Bank transfers route through Faster Payments or BACS, which add their own clearing windows. We've timed PayPal payouts under five minutes at our top-rated sites.
£10 at most operators; £20 at a few. Some casinos charge a £2–£5 admin fee on withdrawals below the minimum. Always check the cashier page before depositing — the figure is usually buried in the payments table, not the bonus terms.
Most casinos allow "reverse withdrawal" by default — convenient if you change your mind, dangerous if you're chasing losses. UKGC rules require operators to offer a permanent opt-out from this feature. Ask support to disable it on your account if you've ever felt the urge to claw back a payout.