Casino bonuses exist because competition between operators is fierce. Every casino wants your first deposit, and most of them are willing to put real money on the table to get it. The result is an industry that gives away billions in bonus funds every year — welcome packages, free spins, cashback, reload deals, day-specific offers, seasonal campaigns, and more.
That generosity comes with conditions. Every bonus has terms attached, and the terms are where the real value (or the lack of it) actually lives. A 400% welcome bonus sounds extraordinary until you read that it carries 70x wagering requirements applied to your deposit and bonus combined. A modest 50% reload with 20x wagering on the bonus amount is the better deal by a significant margin.
Understanding how each bonus type works, what conditions are standard, and what separates a worthwhile offer from a misleading one is what turns a casual player into a sharper one. That’s what we are here to do, so let’s begin!


Not every bonus that looks generous actually is. The headline figure, the percentage, the spin count, the maximum amount, is the least important part of the offer. What determines real value is the set of conditions attached to it. These variables apply to every bonus type on this page, so understanding them before you dive into specifics makes every comparison sharper.
The wagering requirement is the number of times you must play through your bonus funds before any associated winnings become withdrawable. It’s expressed as a multiplier — 30x, 40x, 60x — and it’s the first number to find in any bonus terms.
To calculate your actual playthrough obligation, multiply the wagering figure by the relevant amount. On a 30x requirement applied to a €100 bonus, you need to place €3,000 in qualifying bets. On a 40x requirement applied to a €500 bonus, that rises to €20,000. The size of the wagering requirement relative to the bonus amount determines whether clearing it is realistic for your bankroll and play style.
Industry standard sits between 25x and 40x. Anything below 25x is genuinely player-friendly. Anything above 50x should prompt serious scrutiny before you claim.
This is one of the most important distinctions in bonus terms and one of the least prominently disclosed. Some casinos apply the wagering requirement to the bonus amount only. Others apply it to the combined total of your deposit plus the bonus.
The difference is substantial. A 30x requirement on a €100 bonus means €3,000 in playthrough. A 30x requirement on a €100 deposit plus €100 bonus means €6,000. The wagering multiplier is identical but the obligation is double. Always confirm which method applies before you deposit.
Wagering requirements are not cleared equally across all game types. Each game category contributes a different percentage of each bet toward your playthrough total. Slots almost always contribute 100%, meaning every euro wagered counts in full. Table games like blackjack and roulette typically contribute 10% or less, meaning a €10 bet at the blackjack table clears just €1 of your wagering obligation.
If you primarily play table games or live casino, a bonus with slots-weighted contributions is significantly less valuable than it appears. Check the contribution table for your preferred game type before deciding whether a bonus suits how you actually play.
A cashout cap limits how much you can withdraw from bonus winnings, regardless of what you actually win. It’s most common on free spins offers and no deposit bonuses, but it appears across bonus types. A cap of €50 means that even a €500 win while bonus funds are active results in a maximum withdrawal of €50.
Cashout caps are sometimes disclosed prominently, sometimes buried in the full terms. Finding one after the fact is frustrating. Check for it upfront and factor it into your assessment of the offer’s realistic ceiling.
Every bonus has an expiry window — the period in which you must meet the wagering requirements before the bonus and any associated winnings are forfeited. Most bonuses give you between seven and thirty days.
A short time limit on a large bonus with high wagering creates real pressure. It can push you into playing at stakes or a pace that doesn’t suit your bankroll, which is exactly the kind of environment where losses accelerate. A generous time window is a meaningful part of what makes a bonus fair.
Most bonuses impose a maximum bet per spin or hand while bonus funds are active, typically around €5. Exceeding this limit, even once and even accidentally, can void the bonus and all winnings accumulated while it was active.
This is the trap that catches the most players. It’s easy to increase your stake mid-session without thinking about the active bonus. Before you start any session with bonus funds, confirm the maximum bet limit and set your stake accordingly. It’s a small discipline that prevents a significant and entirely avoidable loss.
Deposit bonuses are the backbone of online casino promotions. They reward you for putting money in, and the terms vary more than the names suggest. Here's how each type works.
The welcome bonus is the offer a casino makes to new players on their first deposit. It’s the most competitive promotion in online gambling, because it’s what casinos use to win new customers in a crowded market. Most welcome bonuses are structured as a percentage match on your opening deposit, up to a set maximum — commonly 100% up to €200, €500, or €1,000, sometimes bundled with free spins.
You register, make your first deposit, and the casino credits your account with bonus funds equal to the match percentage of what you put in. If the offer is 100% up to €300 and you deposit €300, you receive €300 in bonus funds on top of your real money — giving you €600 to play with in total. Deposit less than the maximum and your bonus scales accordingly. Deposit more and the bonus is still capped at the stated maximum.
Most welcome bonuses are credited automatically on deposit. Some require a bonus code entered during registration or at the cashier. Always check before depositing, because a missed code usually can’t be applied retroactively.
Wagering requirements are the critical number. A 30x requirement on a €300 bonus means you need to place €9,000 in qualifying bets before you can withdraw anything derived from that bonus. Some casinos apply the requirement to the bonus amount only; others apply it to the deposit plus bonus combined — the latter is significantly harder to clear. Read which applies.
Game contributions matter here too. If you play blackjack with active bonus funds and the contribution rate is 10%, every €10 hand only counts €1 toward your wagering total. Slots are almost always 100%. If you’re a table game player, a slots-weighted wagering requirement makes most welcome bonuses far less attractive than they appear.
Check the maximum bet per spin or hand while bonus funds are active. Most casinos cap this at €5. Exceeding it — even on a single spin — can void the bonus and any associated winnings entirely.
Time limits vary from seven days to thirty days. On a large welcome bonus with high wagering requirements, a short window is a serious obstacle.
A good welcome bonus has wagering requirements below 35x on the bonus amount alone, a minimum of fourteen days to clear it, 100% slot contributions with reasonable table game contributions, no aggressively low cashout cap, and a maximum bet rule of at least €5.
A bad one stacks high wagering on top of bonus plus deposit, restricts you to a narrow list of games, gives you seven days to clear it, and caps withdrawals at less than the bonus itself.
A second deposit bonus is part of a multi-stage welcome package. It rewards your second deposit at a casino, usually at a lower percentage than the opening offer. Common structures include 50% up to €200 or 75% up to €300.
The second deposit bonus typically activates automatically when you make your second deposit, provided you’ve already claimed the first. At some casinos, you need to opt in via a promotions page or enter a code at the cashier. The funds appear in your bonus balance and are subject to the same wagering mechanics as the first deposit bonus — though the specific terms may differ between stages.
One important detail: at many operators, you must fully wager or forfeit the first deposit bonus before the second becomes available. Claiming both simultaneously isn’t an option. Check the package terms carefully before assuming you can move between stages freely.
The wagering requirement at this stage often differs from the first deposit bonus. Some casinos maintain the same playthrough across all package stages; others increase it as the percentage drops. A 50% bonus with 40x wagering is a worse deal than a 50% bonus with 25x wagering — obvious in writing, but easy to miss when comparing offers across multiple casinos.
Also check whether the second deposit bonus must be claimed within a time window after the first. Some packages expire if you don’t move through the stages quickly enough.
A good second deposit bonus has clear, consistent wagering requirements that don’t escalate from stage one, a reasonable opt-in window, and no requirement to clear the first bonus within an unrealistically short period.
A bad one buries stage-specific terms in a separate section of the T&Cs, increases the wagering as the percentage decreases, or forces you to forfeit stage one before you’ve had a fair chance to complete it.
The third deposit bonus is the middle stage of a multi-part welcome package. By this point, the match percentage has usually dropped further — 25% to 50% is typical — and the offer sometimes shifts toward free spins or a smaller cash match rather than a large deposit top-up.
The mechanics mirror the earlier stages. You make your third deposit and the bonus is either auto-credited or requires opt-in. The funds are added to your bonus balance, subject to the stated wagering terms for that specific stage.
At this stage, some casinos introduce game-specific free spins rather than cash bonuses. These are credited in batches — often ten per day over several days — and carry their own wagering requirements on any winnings generated from them.
When a casino switches from cash bonuses to free spins at stage three, the terms change significantly. Free spin winnings are often capped — sometimes as low as €20 regardless of what you actually win — and the wagering on those winnings can be higher than on a cash bonus. Check the cap before assuming a free spins bundle adds meaningful value.
Also look at whether game restrictions tighten at this stage. Some welcome packages limit stage three bonuses to a specific slot title or game category.
A good third deposit bonus continues the terms established in the earlier stages without quietly introducing new restrictions.
A bad one switches to free spins with a hidden winnings cap, ties the bonus to a single low-RTP slot, or increases the wagering requirement without flagging the change clearly.
The fourth deposit bonus is the penultimate stage of a longer welcome package. The percentage is usually the lowest of the package — 25% is common — and the primary value at this point is continuity rather than a headline reward.
By the fourth deposit, the casino has already made its big impression. This stage is designed to smooth the transition from the welcome phase to regular play. Some operators use it to introduce players to their loyalty programme by awarding points alongside the bonus, or to offer a first look at their reload promotion structure.
The minimum deposit required to trigger this bonus sometimes increases at this stage. A package that required €20 to activate stages one through three may require €50 for stage four. Check the minimum before depositing to avoid missing the trigger.
Also watch for reduced time limits. Some casinos give you less time to claim and clear later-stage bonuses than earlier ones, without making that change visible upfront.
A good fourth deposit bonus integrates smoothly into the casino’s regular promotions structure and gives players a clear path forward after the package ends.
A bad one introduces a higher minimum deposit without clear disclosure, or applies tighter wagering terms that make the smaller bonus even less valuable in practice.
Fifth deposit bonuses appear at casinos with the most extensive welcome packages. They’re relatively rare, and their presence signals a casino that’s invested in long-term player relationships rather than purely front-loaded acquisition.
The structure mirrors the earlier stages. The bonus is triggered by your fifth qualifying deposit, and funds are credited to your bonus balance. At this late stage in a welcome package, the offer is often a flat cash reward or a set number of free spins rather than a percentage match.
Some casinos use the fifth deposit bonus as a gateway into their VIP programme, granting automatic tier elevation or a one-time loyalty points boost alongside the standard bonus.
At this stage, pay attention to what happens after the welcome package ends. Casinos that offer five-stage packages sometimes don’t have equally strong regular promotions once you’ve cleared the welcome phase. The fifth bonus is worth less if there’s nothing meaningful behind it.
A good fifth deposit bonus marks a natural handover into a well-structured ongoing promotions calendar.
A bad one is the last generous thing a casino does for you before reverting to generic, low-value reload offers.
A match deposit bonus credits you with bonus funds equal to a set percentage of your deposit. The term is sometimes used interchangeably with welcome bonuses, but match bonuses appear throughout a player’s lifecycle — as welcome offers, reload deals, seasonal promotions, and loyalty rewards. The defining feature is the percentage match mechanic rather than the occasion it’s offered on.
You deposit a qualifying amount and the casino matches it at the stated percentage. A 100% match on €200 gives you €200 in bonus funds. A 50% match on €200 gives you €100. The funds are added to your bonus balance and subject to wagering requirements before any winnings can be withdrawn.
Match bonuses sometimes come with a minimum deposit requirement that differs from the casino’s standard minimum. Depositing below this threshold means the bonus doesn’t trigger, even if the deposit itself processes normally.
The percentage and the cap together determine the ceiling of what you can receive. But the wagering requirement determines whether reaching that ceiling is realistic. A high-percentage match with aggressive wagering requirements is often less valuable than a modest match with player-friendly terms.
Also check whether the wagering applies to your deposit, your bonus, or both. Casinos that apply wagering to deposit plus bonus require significantly more play to clear.
A good match deposit bonus has a clearly stated percentage, an achievable cap, reasonable wagering applied to the bonus amount only, and no hidden game exclusions.
A bad one uses combined deposit-and-bonus wagering, restricts play to a short list of low-volatility slots, or buries a low maximum cashout limit in the terms.
Welcome packages are finite. The casinos worth staying at are the ones that keep rewarding you after the initial offer runs out. These bonus types are built for existing players and repeat depositors.
A reload bonus is a percentage match offered on deposits made after a player’s welcome package has been used. It’s the most common form of ongoing promotion and the primary tool casinos use to encourage regular deposits from existing players.
Reload bonuses are delivered in several ways. Some casinos run scheduled reloads on specific days — a Monday reload, a weekend top-up — that any eligible player can claim by opting in and making a qualifying deposit. Others send personalised reload offers via email or SMS based on your recent activity. Some casinos automate them as part of a loyalty tier system, with higher tiers receiving better reload percentages.
The opt-in requirement is important. Many reload bonuses are not automatically applied — you need to activate them through the promotions page, enter a code at the cashier, or accept the offer before depositing. Depositing without activating first usually means the bonus is gone.
Reload bonuses tend to carry similar wagering requirements to welcome bonuses — 25x to 40x is the typical range. But because the bonus amounts are smaller, the total playthrough required is more manageable. A 50% reload on a €100 deposit with 30x wagering requires €1,500 in qualifying bets, not €9,000.
Check the minimum deposit carefully. Reload bonuses often have higher deposit minimums than the casino’s standard threshold. Also check the expiry window — reload bonuses frequently expire faster than welcome offers, sometimes within 24 to 72 hours of being claimed.
A good reload bonus is clearly communicated, easy to opt into, and available consistently rather than sporadically. Wagering requirements should be in line with standard industry terms, and the window to claim and clear it should be realistic.
A bad one appears unpredictably, requires a high minimum deposit to activate, and gives you 48 hours to clear 40x wagering on a game-restricted bonus.
A cashback bonus returns a percentage of your net losses over a defined period — daily, weekly, or monthly. It doesn’t erase losing sessions, but it reduces their impact and gives you something to work with going into the next one. Cashback is one of the most player-friendly bonus structures in online gambling because it only activates when you’ve lost money.
The casino calculates your net losses over the cashback period — total wagers minus total winnings. If the result is negative, you receive a percentage of that figure back as a bonus or, at some casinos, as withdrawable cash. A 10% weekly cashback on €500 in net losses returns €50.
The form the cashback takes matters significantly. Cash cashback lands as withdrawable funds with no strings attached. Bonus cashback comes with wagering requirements before you can withdraw. Many casinos advertise cashback without specifying which type it is until you read the terms.
Some cashback programmes are tiered — loyalty programme members at higher tiers receive higher cashback percentages. A bronze-tier player might receive 5% weekly cashback; a platinum-tier player might receive 15% or more.
The first thing to check is cashback currency: is it real cash or bonus funds? If it’s bonus funds, what are the wagering requirements? Wager-free cashback is genuinely valuable. Cashback with 30x wagering requirements is a much weaker proposition.
Check what counts toward the net loss calculation. Some casinos exclude winnings from free spins or bonus funds when calculating cashback eligibility. Others apply the cashback only to losses on specific game categories.
Also look for a cashback cap. A 15% cashback offer with a €100 maximum is very different from 15% with no cap.
A good cashback bonus returns funds as withdrawable cash or with minimal wagering requirements, applies to all real-money play, and has a generous or uncapped maximum.
A bad one wraps the cashback in 35x wagering, excludes your biggest loss sources from the calculation, and caps the return at an amount too low to matter.
A no deposit bonus gives you something to play with — bonus cash or free spins — without requiring any deposit. It’s granted just for creating an account, making it the lowest-friction way to try a casino. For players evaluating a new operator, it’s a chance to experience the platform without any financial commitment.
No deposit bonuses are credited automatically on account registration and verification. Some require a bonus code entered during sign-up or requested via live chat after registration. The bonus lands in your account as either a fixed cash amount — typically €5 to €20 — or a set number of free spins on a specified slot.
Because the casino carries all the financial risk, no deposit bonuses almost always come with conditions that limit their value as a profit vehicle. They’re best understood as a try-before-you-deposit mechanism rather than a genuine money-making opportunity.
Wagering requirements on no deposit bonuses are consistently higher than on deposit-based offers — 40x to 60x is common, and some casinos go higher. On a €10 no deposit bonus with 50x wagering, you need to place €500 in qualifying bets before withdrawing anything. On free spins, the wagering applies to whatever you win from the spins, not to the spins themselves.
Maximum withdrawal caps are critical here. A no deposit bonus with a €50 cashout cap means that regardless of what you win, you can only take out €50. This cap is sometimes not prominently disclosed.
Most no deposit bonuses also restrict which games you can play. They’re frequently limited to one specific slot or a small selection of titles.
A good no deposit bonus has a clear, reasonable wagering requirement, a cashout cap that’s proportionate to the bonus amount, and no excessively narrow game restriction.
A bad one requires 60x wagering on a €5 bonus, limits play to a single slot with a €20 maximum withdrawal, and expires within 24 hours of being credited.
A no wagering bonus — sometimes called a wager-free bonus — is any casino bonus that carries no playthrough requirement. Whatever you win while using it, you keep in full. No wagering bonuses exist across multiple bonus types: welcome bonuses, free spins, cashback, and reload offers can all be structured without wagering requirements.
You claim the bonus and play. Any winnings land directly in your withdrawable balance — no counter to meet, no playthrough to track, no conditions on when you can cash out. Some casinos apply a maximum cashout limit in place of wagering requirements, capping what you can withdraw from bonus winnings even though no wagering is required.
No wagering bonuses are genuinely rare. Casinos that offer them typically compensate with smaller bonus amounts, higher minimum deposits, or a narrower game selection. The trade-off is real, but for players who find standard wagering terms frustrating or unrealistic to clear, the simplicity has clear value.
Even without wagering requirements, no wagering bonuses can still carry restrictions. The most common substitute condition is a maximum cashout limit. A no wagering bonus capped at €100 in withdrawable winnings is a strong offer. One capped at €20 is considerably less compelling.
Also check game eligibility. Some no wagering offers are restricted to specific slots or game types. Playing an excluded game with an active no wagering bonus can still result in the bonus being voided.
A good no wagering bonus has a generous or uncapped cashout limit, applies across a wide range of games, and has no hidden conditions that functionally replicate wagering requirements in a different form.
A bad one caps winnings so aggressively that the absence of wagering requirements becomes meaningless in practice.
Day-specific promotions are a standard feature at casinos that invest seriously in player retention. They give regular players a predictable schedule of offers to plan around, and they tend to reward the players who are most consistently active at the casino.
Monday bonuses are reload promotions designed to bring players back after the weekend. They typically take the form of a deposit match or a free spins drop on a featured slot, available for a short window at the start of the week.
Most Monday bonuses require you to opt in via the promotions page before depositing. The offer is live from midnight and expires by end of day Monday in most cases. Some casinos extend the window into Tuesday morning, but the standard is a 24-hour availability period.
Check whether the bonus applies to all deposit methods or excludes certain payment options — e-wallets are sometimes excluded from day-specific promotions. Also confirm the minimum deposit required to activate it, as this often differs from the casino’s standard threshold.
A good Monday bonus is consistently available week to week, has a straightforward opt-in process, and carries reasonable wagering terms.
A bad one appears sporadically, excludes popular payment methods, and requires a higher deposit minimum than the standard threshold without clear disclosure.
Tuesday bonuses are less common than Monday or Friday deals, which makes them worth noting when a casino runs them consistently. They follow the same reload structure but often target a specific game category — live casino tables or a featured slot series — rather than offering a general deposit match.
The opt-in and deposit mechanics are the same as Monday bonuses. Tuesday offers at casinos that run them consistently tend to be part of a deliberate weekly promotions calendar rather than one-off deals, which is a good sign about how seriously that casino manages its ongoing promotions.
Because Tuesday bonuses are often game-specific, check whether the targeted game category aligns with how you actually play. A live casino bonus has no value if you play slots exclusively, and vice versa.
A good Tuesday bonus targets a game category that suits your play style and offers genuine value relative to the deposit required.
A bad one restricts the bonus to a single game with unfavourable RTP or terms that make clearing the wagering impractical.
Wednesday bonuses are mid-week reload offers. They break up the week for regular players and are often structured as free spins on a new or featured slot release rather than a straight deposit match.
Free spins Wednesday promotions are often tied to a specific title the casino wants to promote. Spins are credited in a single batch on Wednesday and expire within 24 hours in most cases. Some casinos use Wednesday bonuses to preview an upcoming weekend promotion, offering a smaller mid-week reward that unlocks a larger Friday deal.
When Wednesday bonuses take the form of free spins rather than cash, check the wagering requirement on winnings — free spin winnings are sometimes subject to higher wagering than standard cash bonuses. Also confirm the value per spin. A 20-spin offer at €0.10 per spin is worth €2 in theoretical value, which provides useful context for whether the terms are worth engaging with.
A good Wednesday bonus delivers consistent mid-week value, whether as cash or spins, with terms that are straightforward to meet.
A bad one credits low-value spins on a game you’d never choose, with 40x wagering on any winnings and a 24-hour expiry that doesn’t give you enough time to play them.
Thursday bonuses serve as a warm-up to the weekend. They’re similar in structure to Wednesday offers but sometimes come with slightly higher value, with casinos using them to build momentum into their Friday and weekend promotions.
Thursday deals at well-organised casinos are sometimes linked thematically to the weekend promotion — a Thursday free spins offer that unlocks a Friday reload, for example. Check whether the offer stands alone or is part of a wider promotional chain before opting in.
If the Thursday bonus is connected to a weekend promotion, understand the full chain of conditions before committing. Some linked promotions require you to clear each stage before the next activates, which creates pressure if the Thursday bonus has a short expiry window.
A good Thursday bonus has clear, standalone value and is not artificially tied to conditions on a separate promotion.
A bad one requires you to meet Thursday terms to unlock Friday terms, with an unrealistic timeline between the two.
Friday is the most active day in online casino promotions. More casinos run Friday deals than any other weekday, and the offers are often the most generous of the working week — larger deposit matches, higher free spin counts, or prize draws running into the weekend.
Friday bonuses vary more in structure than other day-specific offers. Some are simple deposit matches. Others are multi-part promotions — deposit on Friday, receive free spins Saturday morning, enter a prize draw automatically. Understanding the full structure before opting in prevents missed steps and forfeited rewards.
Because Friday bonuses are more competitive, wagering terms are sometimes tighter to compensate for the higher headline value. A generous Friday reload with 60x wagering is less attractive than a modest one with 25x. Also watch for Friday bonuses that roll into weekend promotions — confirm the combined terms before committing to the full chain.
A good Friday bonus delivers a meaningful uplift with terms that are proportionate to the offer size.
A bad one uses a high headline figure to mask aggressive wagering requirements, or front-loads value that evaporates once you read the combined weekend terms.
Weekend bonuses cover Saturday and Sunday and are built for players who do the majority of their gaming outside the working week. They appear as standalone weekend packages, extensions of Friday promotions, or separate Saturday and Sunday offers running in parallel.
Weekend promotions at serious casinos are often their biggest recurring offers. High-value deposit matches, large free spin bundles, and tournament entries are all common weekend incentives. Some casinos split the weekend into separate Saturday and Sunday promotions, each requiring its own opt-in and deposit.
When a weekend bonus is an extension of a Friday offer, clarify whether the Friday bonus must be fully claimed and activated before the weekend component unlocks. Also check expiry times — some weekend bonuses expire Sunday midnight, others carry over into Monday morning. The window affects how much time you realistically have to meet wagering requirements.
A good weekend bonus is clearly structured, easy to opt into independently of any Friday offer, and gives you enough time across both days to actually use it.
A bad one chains multiple promotions together with overlapping conditions, unclear expiry times, and payment method restrictions buried in the terms.
These bonus types stand apart from standard deposit promotions — either because of the player they're designed for, the size of the reward, or the exclusivity of the offer.
High roller bonuses are designed for players who deposit significantly more than the average. The defining features are higher deposit caps, larger bonus amounts, and — critically — lower wagering requirements. Casinos want high-volume players and are willing to offer better terms to attract and retain them.
High roller bonuses are sometimes publicly advertised on a casino’s promotions page, but more often they’re offered directly to qualifying players via a personal account manager or a VIP team invitation. The threshold that qualifies a player as a high roller varies by casino — some set it at €1,000 per deposit, others much higher.
The bonus structure differs from standard offers. Rather than a 100% match up to €500, a high roller bonus might offer 50% up to €5,000 — a lower percentage but a vastly higher ceiling. The wagering requirement is usually 15x to 25x rather than the standard 30x to 40x, which is a significant improvement in real terms.
Despite the better headline terms, high roller bonuses still carry wagering requirements and game restrictions. Confirm the wagering applies to the bonus amount only, not the combined deposit and bonus. Also check whether the offer includes an elevated withdrawal limit — some high roller bonuses come with higher cashout caps specifically matched to the scale of the reward.
If the bonus is offered via a personal account manager, get the full terms in writing before accepting. Verbal offers carry no weight in a dispute.
A good high roller bonus has wagering requirements below 25x on the bonus amount only, a high or unlimited withdrawal cap, and access to the casino’s full game library.
A bad one mimics standard welcome bonus terms with a higher ceiling, offering more exposure to wagering risk without meaningful improvement in playthrough conditions.
Free spins let you play slot rounds without using your own money. They appear in welcome packages, as standalone promotions, as loyalty rewards, and as day-specific offers. The value of a free spins bonus depends on four things: the number of spins, the value per spin, the RTP of the game they’re tied to, and the wagering requirement on any winnings.
Free spins are credited to your account and must be used on a specified slot — or occasionally a short list of eligible titles. Each spin plays at a fixed value set by the casino, typically between €0.10 and €1.00. Winnings from the spins accumulate in your bonus balance and are subject to wagering requirements before they become withdrawable.
Some free spins are credited all at once. Others arrive in daily batches — ten per day for ten days, for example — which extends the experience but also means slower access to the full offer.
The spin value matters more than the spin count. 200 spins at €0.10 each carry a theoretical value of €20. 20 spins at €1.00 each also carry a theoretical value of €20. Count and value together determine what you’re actually working with.
Wagering requirements on free spin winnings are frequently higher than on cash bonuses — 40x to 50x is common. On a €20 theoretical value with 40x wagering, you need to place €800 in qualifying bets before you can withdraw. If the game tied to the spins has low RTP, your starting position is weaker before the wagering even begins.
Maximum cashout caps on free spin winnings are widespread and sometimes very low — €50 is not unusual regardless of how much you actually win. Check this before treating a free spins offer as a significant opportunity.
A good free spins bonus uses a spin value of at least €0.20, ties the spins to a high-RTP slot, carries wagering requirements below 35x on winnings, and has a cashout cap proportionate to the offer size.
A bad one offers hundreds of spins at €0.10 on a low-RTP game, applies 50x wagering to winnings, and caps withdrawals at an amount that makes a meaningful win essentially unachievable.
Exclusive bonuses are deals negotiated directly between CasinoDaddy and casino operators, offering our readers terms that are genuinely better than what the casino publishes publicly. These aren’t rebranded standard offers — they’re improved versions with specific enhancements negotiated on behalf of our audience.
Exclusive bonuses are accessed through CasinoDaddy links or via bonus codes listed on our dedicated exclusive bonuses page. The improved terms are only available to players who arrive through our platform. Going directly to the casino site gives you the standard public offer, not the exclusive one.
The improvements vary by casino and deal. Common enhancements include reduced wagering requirements, a higher match percentage, an increased deposit cap, additional free spins on top of the base offer, or a combination of these.
Verify that the exclusive terms are clearly stated and distinct from the casino’s standard offer before signing up. If the only difference is a bonus code with no meaningful improvement in conditions, it’s not genuinely exclusive. Also confirm the offer is current — exclusive deals are time-limited and rotate as casinos update their promotions.
A good exclusive bonus delivers a measurable improvement in at least one meaningful area — lower wagering, more spins, a higher cap — compared to the casino’s public offer.
A bad one uses the word exclusive without any substantive difference in terms.
These bonus structures reward consistency and engagement over time. They're less about what you deposit today and more about what your relationship with a casino looks like over months and years.
Casino VIP programmes reward consistent play with a tiered system of escalating benefits. The longer you play and the more you deposit, the higher your tier — and the more significant the advantages. VIP programmes are the primary mechanism casinos use to retain their highest-value long-term players.
Most VIP programmes operate on a points or tier system. You earn points through real-money play — typically at a fixed rate per amount wagered — and accumulate enough to move between tiers. Higher tiers unlock better benefits: faster withdrawal processing, higher withdrawal limits, dedicated account managers, personalised reload bonuses, lower wagering requirements, and invitations to exclusive promotions.
Some VIP programmes are open to all players from registration. Others are invite-only, accessible only after you’ve demonstrated a consistent deposit and play pattern that the casino’s VIP team notices.
Check whether the programme is points-based or activity-based. Points-based programmes let you track progress transparently. Activity-based ones rely on the casino’s internal assessment of your value, which is less predictable and harder to plan around.
Also check tier maintenance requirements. Some programmes require you to sustain a certain level of activity each month to retain your tier. Dropping below the threshold can mean losing your VIP status and all the benefits attached to it.
A good VIP programme has a transparent points structure, clear tier benefits that improve meaningfully at each level, and fair maintenance requirements.
A bad one operates as a black box — the casino decides who gets VIP status and what they receive without clear criteria — or strips tier benefits the moment activity drops below an undisclosed threshold.
Casino tournaments put players in direct competition with each other for a share of a prize pool. They run primarily on slots — tracking points, biggest win multipliers, or total wagered amounts across a set period — though some casinos also run live casino tournaments on blackjack, roulette, or poker variants.
When you enter a tournament, you’re placed on a leaderboard with other participants. Your position is determined by whatever metric the tournament uses — points accumulated per spin, largest single win, most rounds played, or highest win multiplier. At the end of the tournament period, the prize pool is distributed to the top finishers according to the stated prize table.
Some tournaments require an entry fee — usually a fixed buy-in. Others are free to enter, sometimes called freerolls. Entry fees give you a specific number of tournament spins or a set starting chip stack. Free tournaments are open to anyone who meets the eligibility criteria, which usually means being a registered player with a recent deposit.
Check the prize distribution carefully. A €10,000 prize pool split across 500 players means most participants receive a very small amount. Understand what finishing position you realistically need to reach for the prize to be meaningful relative to your entry cost or playing time.
Also check whether tournament winnings come as cash or bonus funds. Cash prizes are withdrawable immediately. Bonus prize winnings carry wagering requirements before withdrawal. The distinction changes the effective value of the prize significantly.
A good tournament has a transparent prize table, reasonable eligibility criteria, and distributes meaningful prizes across a realistic number of finishing positions.
A bad one concentrates the entire prize pool in the top three positions, awards bonus funds with high wagering rather than cash, and uses a metric — like total wagered — that systematically advantages players with larger bankrolls over those playing more carefully.
Refer a friend bonuses reward you when someone you invite registers and makes a qualifying deposit at the same casino. The reward is typically a flat cash amount, a free spins bundle, or both, credited once the referred player meets the minimum activity threshold.
The casino provides you with a unique referral link or code. Your friend registers using that link or enters your code during sign-up. Once they make a qualifying deposit — and in some cases complete a minimum wagering threshold — your bonus is credited automatically. Some casinos also reward the referred player with an enhanced welcome offer for arriving through a referral.
The minimum activity required from the referred player varies. At some casinos, a single qualifying deposit is enough. At others, the referred player must wager a set amount before your reward unlocks.
Check the minimum deposit required from the referred player to trigger your reward. A refer a friend bonus that requires a €100 first deposit from your friend is a different proposition to one that only requires €20. Also check whether your reward arrives as cash or bonus funds — the wagering implications of each are significant.
Also verify whether there’s a cap on how many friends you can refer. Some casinos limit the number of referral rewards per account per month.
A good refer a friend bonus has a low and fair activity threshold for the referred player, rewards the referrer with cash rather than bonus funds, and has no unreasonably low cap on referral numbers.
A bad one requires the referred player to wager a large amount before the reward triggers, pays out as bonus funds with high wagering requirements, and buries the eligibility criteria deep in the terms.
Throughout the year, casinos run promotions tied to major holidays and seasonal events — Christmas, Easter, Halloween, Valentine’s Day, and more. These campaigns often deliver some of the most creative and competitive offers of the year, with casinos competing hard to stand out during peak periods.
All seasonal and holiday bonus offers are tracked and updated in one place.
The percentage figure on a casino bonus tells you how much of your deposit the casino matches in bonus funds. A 100% bonus on a €200 deposit gives you €200 in bonus money. A 200% bonus on the same deposit gives you €400. The number looks simple, but the percentage is only one part of the value equation.
Higher percentages consistently attract higher wagering requirements. A 400% bonus at 60x wagering requires far more play to clear than a 100% bonus at 25x, and the higher playthrough often makes the larger bonus harder to benefit from in practice. The best approach is to calculate the total wagering obligation before comparing offers across percentage tiers.
100% deposit bonuses are the industry standard and the most competitive category. Wagering requirements at this tier are typically the most reasonable, and the caps are achievable for a broad range of players. This is the benchmark against which all other tiers should be measured.
200% deposit bonuses triple your deposit in total funds and offer strong upfront value. The wagering requirements at this tier are higher than at 100%, but a 200% bonus with fair terms is one of the best deals available to a regular depositor. Worth pursuing when the playthrough is below 40x on the bonus amount.
300% deposit bonuses are less common. When you find one with genuinely fair wagering terms, it represents strong value. The rarity of good-value 300% bonuses means the ones that do appear with reasonable conditions are worth noting. Approach any 300% offer that combines a high cap with low wagering carefully — those conditions together are unusual for a reason.
400% deposit bonuses are the highest standard tier and the least common. They tend to appear at casinos targeting high-volume players, and the wagering requirements can be aggressive. The headline number is eye-catching, but the total playthrough obligation at this tier is the largest of any standard bonus category. Evaluate the full terms before depositing.
Every casino bonus comes with conditions. Understanding them before you claim is the difference between a bonus that adds real value and one that costs you time and money without any return.
Wagering requirements are the most important term to check. They specify how many times you must play through your bonus funds before withdrawing any associated winnings. A 30x requirement on a €100 bonus means placing €3,000 in qualifying bets. Some casinos apply wagering to the bonus amount only. Others apply it to the combined total of your deposit plus the bonus — that second method is significantly more demanding and should be factored into any comparison.
Game contributions determine how efficiently your bets count toward the wagering total. Slots are almost always 100% — every euro wagered counts as a euro toward the requirement. Table games like blackjack and roulette typically contribute 10% or less, meaning a €10 bet at the blackjack table only clears €1 of your wagering obligation. If you prefer table games, a slots-weighted wagering requirement makes most bonuses considerably less valuable than they appear.
Time limits set the window in which you must meet the wagering requirement. Most bonuses give you between seven and thirty days. A short window on a large bonus with high wagering is a serious problem — it pressures you into playing at a pace and stake level that may not suit your bankroll or play style.
Maximum bet rules restrict how much you can wager per round while bonus funds are active. The standard cap is around €5 per spin or hand. Exceeding this limit — even accidentally — can void the bonus and all associated winnings. This rule exists to prevent players from clearing wagering requirements through a single high-stakes spin.
Maximum withdrawal limits cap how much you can take out from bonus winnings regardless of what you actually win. A free spins offer with a €50 max cashout means that even if you hit a €500 win, you walk away with €50. These caps are common and sometimes buried in the terms.
Game exclusions restrict which titles you can play with active bonus funds. Playing an excluded game can void the bonus entirely. Always check the list of eligible games before starting a session with bonus funds active.
Every bonus featured on CasinoDaddy is assessed against a consistent set of criteria. A large headline figure means nothing if the terms make the bonus unrealistic to benefit from in practice.
Casino bonuses are one of the few parts of online gambling where knowledge genuinely shifts the odds in your favour. You can’t control the RNG, but you can choose which offers to take, which terms are fair, and which bonuses to walk past entirely.
The players who get the most out of bonus offers are not the ones chasing the biggest headline numbers. They’re the ones who understand wagering requirements before they claim, who know what game contributions mean for their play style, and who recognise the difference between a cashout cap that’s proportionate and one that makes winning meaningless.
Use the sections on this page as a reference point every time you encounter a new offer. If a bonus type isn’t covered here, or you want to dig deeper into a specific category, every section links to a dedicated page with current offers and detailed breakdowns.
Play smart, read the terms, and make every bonus work harder.
The wagering requirement is the single most important term. It determines how much play is needed before you can withdraw any bonus-related winnings. But it needs to be read alongside what the requirement applies to — bonus only or deposit plus bonus combined — and which games contribute to clearing it. A low wagering requirement applied to both deposit and bonus can be harder to meet than a moderate requirement applied to the bonus alone.
No. No deposit bonuses give you funds or free spins without any deposit required. They’re less common than deposit-based offers and almost always carry stricter wagering terms and lower cashout caps. They’re best used to evaluate a casino rather than as a serious profit opportunity.
Real money in your account is freely withdrawable at any time, subject to standard verification requirements. Bonus funds are restricted — they must be wagered a specified number of times before any winnings from them can be withdrawn. The two balances are separate, and at most casinos, real money is used first when you place a bet, with bonus funds applied once the real money portion is spent.
At most casinos, no. The standard approach is one active bonus at a time. You need to complete or forfeit an existing bonus before the next one can be activated. Some casinos allow certain bonus types — free spins and a cash bonus, for example — to run simultaneously, but this is the exception. Check the terms of each individual offer before assuming you can stack them.
Maximum bet rules exist to prevent players from clearing wagering requirements through a small number of high-stakes spins. Casinos use them to ensure bonus funds are played through in a way that reflects normal gameplay. Breaching the limit — even once — usually voids the bonus and any winnings accumulated while it was active.
In most cases, making a withdrawal before clearing wagering requirements results in the bonus being cancelled. Any pending winnings tied to the bonus are forfeited. Some casinos let you withdraw your real money balance while keeping the bonus active, but others cancel everything the moment a withdrawal is initiated. Read the specific withdrawal terms for any bonus before requesting a payout.



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