Rainbet Fees and Commissions Explained
Updated on July 2, 2026 by the editorial team
Wondering what Rainbet fees and commissions will cost you before you deposit? The short answer for most UK players is nothing extra at the cashier. Rainbet does not add its own charge on deposits or withdrawals, so the money that leaves your card or wallet is the money that lands in your balance. The costs that do exist come from outside the casino: your bank, a card issuer, or a currency conversion when you play in a currency that is not GBP. This page breaks down every one of those, method by method, so you know exactly where a fee can appear.
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Deposit and withdrawal charges, method by method
Rainbet runs a no-fee cashier. That means the operator itself does not skim a percentage off your deposit or your cashout. What you send is what you get, and what you request is what you receive.
Third parties are a different story. A card issuer might treat a gambling deposit as a cash advance and apply its own fee. A crypto network charges a mining or gas fee that has nothing to do with Rainbet. A bank handling a SEPA transfer may take a small processing cut. None of that money reaches the casino, but it still affects what hits your account, so it belongs on the table below.
| Method | Rainbet deposit fee | Rainbet withdrawal fee | Possible third-party cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa | None | None | Issuer cash-advance fee on some cards |
| Mastercard | None | None | Issuer cash-advance fee on some cards |
| Bitcoin | None | None | Network (miner) fee, varies with demand |
| Ethereum | None | None | Gas fee, varies with demand |
| USDT | None | None | Network fee, depends on the chain used |
| Bank Transfer (SEPA) | None | None | Possible bank processing charge |
Two limits sit across every row and are worth repeating. The minimum deposit is £10, though you need £20 down to switch on the welcome offer. The minimum withdrawal is £20, and cashouts are capped at £4,000 per day and £30,000 per month. Those are limits, not fees, but they shape how you move money just as much as any charge would. For the full list of supported options and their timings, check the payments section.
One more thing about the table is worth spelling out. The "none" in every Rainbet column is a flat zero, not a hidden tier that kicks in above a certain amount. Whether you deposit £10 or the full amount that unlocks the bonus, the casino's cut stays at nothing. The only figures that move are the third-party ones, and those depend entirely on who processes the payment rather than on Rainbet. That is why the same £50 deposit can feel free on one card and carry a charge on another: the difference is your issuer, not the casino. If you want to confirm a payout method behaves the way you expect, the payout percentage page and the cashier itself both show the live figures before you confirm anything.
Keeping your costs at zero
Since Rainbet adds no charge of its own, avoiding fees is really about sidestepping the third-party ones. A few deliberate choices keep the whole trip free from start to finish.
Crypto is the cleanest route. Deposit and cash out in Bitcoin, Ethereum or USDT and Rainbet takes nothing, while the only cost is the network fee, which you can often reduce by transacting when the chain is quiet. On USDT in particular, picking a low-cost chain keeps that network fee down to pennies.
Here is how to stop each avoidable cost before it lands:
- Play in GBP. Keeping your account in pounds removes conversion charges entirely. More on that below.
- Check your card type. Some issuers flag casino deposits as cash advances. A quick call to your bank tells you whether yours does, and a debit card usually avoids the problem a credit card can create.
- Time your crypto transfers. Network fees rise and fall with traffic. Sending when demand is low shaves the cost.
- Withdraw in fewer, larger chunks. One cashout carries one network or bank fee. Ten small ones carry ten. Just stay under the £4,000 daily cap, since a request above it gets split across days.
- Clear wagering first. If you took the 100% up to £1,000 + 100 FS welcome package, finish the x40 playthrough inside the 7-day window before you withdraw, so nothing is held up and you are not tempted into extra transactions.
Do all of that and your realistic fee bill is zero on GBP crypto play, or close to it on cards. The one variable you cannot fully control is a third party's own policy, which is exactly why it pays to know your bank's rules before you deposit rather than after.
How currency conversion affects what you pay
Rainbet is built for GBP play, and that matters for your wallet. When your account, your deposits and your withdrawals all run in pounds, there is no conversion step and no conversion cost. The trouble starts when a currency mismatch creeps in.
Two situations bring conversion into play. The first is funding your account from a card or bank held in another currency, where your bank converts to GBP at its own rate and often adds a margin. The second is crypto: the value of Bitcoin, Ethereum or USDT is quoted against GBP at the moment of the transaction, so the exchange rate at that instant decides how many pounds your coins are worth.
Keep the following in mind so conversion never surprises you:
- A GBP card or bank account funding a GBP balance means no conversion at all.
- USDT, a stablecoin pegged to the dollar, still converts to pounds and moves with the GBP-USD rate, even though the coin itself holds steady.
- Bitcoin and Ethereum swing in value, so the pounds you deposit and the pounds you later withdraw can differ purely from market movement, separate from any fee.
- Your bank, not Rainbet, sets the conversion rate and any margin on card and transfer methods.
The takeaway is simple. Match your currency to GBP wherever you can, and where you use crypto, remember you are exposed to the exchange rate rather than to a casino charge. The £20 minimum withdrawal and the £4,000 daily limit are quoted in pounds, so a crypto balance is measured against those figures at the rate on the day you cash out.
Fees and commissions: quick answers
Does Rainbet charge a fee on deposits?
No. Rainbet does not add its own deposit fee on any method. The only possible cost comes from a third party, such as a card issuer treating the deposit as a cash advance, or a crypto network fee.
Are there commissions on withdrawals?
Rainbet takes no commission on cashouts. Crypto withdrawals may carry a small network fee, and a bank could apply a processing charge on a SEPA transfer, but neither of those goes to the casino. The minimum withdrawal is £20.
How do I deposit or withdraw without paying anything?
Play in GBP and use crypto. Rainbet charges nothing, and transacting when the network is quiet keeps the miner or gas fee low. Withdrawing in larger chunks rather than many small ones also cuts the number of network fees you pay.
Will I be charged for currency conversion?
Not by Rainbet. If your card or bank account is in a currency other than GBP, your bank converts at its own rate and may add a margin. Keeping everything in pounds avoids that step. Crypto values are set against GBP at the moment of each transaction.
Are the deposit and withdrawal limits the same as fees?
No, they are separate. Limits set how much you can move: from £10 to deposit (£20 for the bonus), a £20 minimum withdrawal, and a £4,000 daily and £30,000 monthly cashout cap. They are not charges, but they shape how you plan your transactions.
