Why casino withdrawals get delayed (and how to escalate when they do)

BananaBread

Administrator
If you're reading this your cashout is stuck. Or you're about to request one and want to know what to do if it stalls.
Either way, the playbook is the same. I've been logging casino payouts for four years, and I've had plenty stall along the way.
What I learned is that most "stuck" payouts aren't actually stuck, they're inside the normal range, and the real stuck ones follow a predictable escalation path that works.
For full payout rankings and real timestamps per brand, see my Fastest Withdrawal Casinos 2026 Payout Test. This post is what to do when things go wrong, regardless of which brand you're playing at.

First: is it actually stuck, or just slow?​

These are my thresholds from four years of cashout data. Below them, raising a ticket gets you nowhere useful.
Above them, start escalating.
  • Crypto on-chain: If pending with no on-chain broadcast after 2 hours, start asking. Most brands are instant to under 30 minutes. Anything past 2 hours without a TXID is worth a support ticket.
  • Skrill / Neteller: 24 hours. Most clear in 1 to 6 hours. 24+ hours without movement, raise a ticket.
  • UK Faster Payments: 2 business days. Usually 3 to 24 hours. Past 2 business days without landing, raise a ticket.
  • SEPA: 2 business days.
  • International wire / SWIFT: 5 business days. These are slower by design.
  • Debit card refund: 3 to 5 business days. Often appears as a pending authorisation before becoming a credit.
  • Cheque (rare in 2026 but happens at some US-facing sites): 10 to 15 business days.
If you're inside these windows, the honest answer is "wait". Support will tell you the same thing, and a ticket opened inside the normal window can actually push you back in the queue at some brands.

The 9 most common reasons a payout is legitimately delayed​

Ranked by how often I see them in reader complaints.

1. Bonus playthrough not complete​

You clicked withdraw while a deposit bonus was active. The site puts the withdrawal in pending until the wager requirement is met, cancelled, or forfeited.
Resolution: finish the wagering, cancel the bonus (you lose the bonus money but not the deposit), or forfeit the whole thing to cash out immediately.

2. KYC not complete​

The first real withdrawal triggers a Know Your Customer pass. If your documents aren't on file, or they were rejected for quality, the payout sits until you upload clean copies.
I wrote up the full KYC playbook separately, worth reading if this is your situation.

3. Same-method policy conflict​

You deposited £100 by card but requested £100 to Skrill. Most sites require the first £100 of any withdrawal to return to the card you deposited with before any excess goes to a different method.
Resolution: change the payout method to match the original deposit, or split into two withdrawals.

4. Source-of-funds review​

Triggered by a deposit total above a threshold or a large win. The site needs payslips, savings statements, or similar evidence.
This is a 2 to 14 business day process. Keep uploads clean and recent.

5. Weekend queue​

Your cashout was submitted Friday evening. Some casinos run fiat queues weekday-only.
Monday morning it clears. This is especially common with UK bank transfers and with casinos that claim "24 hour" payouts but don't staff the finance desk on weekends.

6. Technical block from your bank or wallet provider​

UK banks reject gambling merchant credits with some frequency, even on legitimate payouts. Revolut and Monzo are the most common culprits for accepting casino credits.
Your high-street bank may silently reject. Resolution: call your bank, whitelist the merchant, or switch to a different deposit method.

7. Account review (any "unusual activity" flag)​

Bonus abuse flags, multi-accounting flags, or IP-address inconsistencies can all trigger a review that pauses the payout. You'll usually get an email requesting clarification.
Respond quickly and honestly.

8. Compliance hold on the bank side​

This is the one most players don't consider. Your bank receives the casino credit and decides to hold it for its own source-of-funds review.
The casino has paid. Your bank is the one sitting on the money.
Resolution: call your bank, provide the casino's name and confirm the credit source.

9. Payment processor outage​

Rare but real. Skrill, Neteller, or a card processor has a regional outage and queues back up.
Usually resolves within 24 to 48 hours with no action required. The casino's support team is often the first to tell you when this is the cause.

The escalation ladder​

If you're past the normal threshold above, work the ladder in order. Do not skip steps because each one documents your case for the next level.

Step 1: Live chat with support​

Open a fresh chat. Give the withdrawal ID (or cashout reference number), the amount, the method, and the time you submitted.
Ask three specific questions:
  • "What status is the withdrawal in right now?"
  • "Is compliance reviewing it? If so, what document or information do you need?"
  • "What's the expected timeline from this point?"
Save the chat transcript. Most casinos email it automatically.
If they don't, take screenshots. This is your evidence trail for any subsequent step.

Step 2: Email the specific department​

Open the casino's contact page and look for a dedicated withdrawals or finance email. If none, use the general support email.
Subject line: "Withdrawal delay [ID] [amount] [method]". Attach the chat transcript from Step 1.
Ask for a specific person's name and a specific next step with a specific date.

Step 3: Named compliance officer or DPO​

If Steps 1 and 2 return circular answers ("please wait", "compliance is reviewing"), ask for a named compliance officer and their direct email. Under UK GDPR and EU GDPR you have the right to a Data Protection Officer contact as well.
A direct email to the DPO asking what data they are holding and why, and when they expect to resolve it, often moves cases that support can't.

Step 4: Independent dispute mediation​

Public, respected, and free:
  • AskGamblers Complaint Service: submits your case to the casino and tracks response. Well-run. askgamblers.com/online-casino-complaints
  • Casino Guru Complaint Resolution Centre: independent, free, and forces a public response. casino.guru/complaints
  • ThePOGG: legacy player protection service. Still active for many brands.
These services are read by the casino's reputation team and almost always trigger a response within 48 hours. Expect the brand to resolve your case once it's public because the reputational cost is higher than the payout.

Step 5: Regulator complaint​

UKGC-licensed operator: contact IBAS (Independent Betting Adjudication Service) for dispute mediation. IBAS decisions are binding on the operator: ibas-uk.com.
MGA (Malta Gaming Authority) licensee: submit via MGA's player support page. Decision within 45 to 90 days.
Curaçao operator under the 2024 LOK regulations: complaints go to the Curaçao Gaming Control Board (CGB). Slower than MGA or UKGC but improving.
Gibraltar or Isle of Man licensee: direct complaint to the respective gambling authority.

Step 6: Card chargeback (last resort)​

Only for card deposits, within 120 days for Visa and Mastercard. File through your card issuer citing goods/services not delivered.
This almost always ends the player/brand relationship and the casino may list you with AIS (Affiliate Investigation Service) or similar. Use only when:
  • The operator is unresponsive through Steps 1 to 5.
  • The regulator route is stalled or the site is unlicensed.
  • You've exhausted dispute mediation.

What NOT to do​

  • Don't play your pending balance. If you click "cancel withdrawal" and play, the money is gone if you lose. Most casinos offer this as a feature. It is designed to trap players.
  • Don't open a second account. Multi-accounting voids the withdrawal entirely at every serious brand.
  • Don't post abusive language in chat. Chat logs get attached to compliance reviews and can hurt your case at independent mediators.
  • Don't chargeback before Step 5. It closes off all other resolution paths.

What "good" looks like when you escalate well​

From a real case I helped a reader work last month:
  • Day 0: Cashout requested, £3,200, Skrill.
  • Day 1: No movement. Live chat confirms it's in "compliance review". Reader saves transcript.
  • Day 3: Same answer. Reader emails withdrawals@[brand] with chat transcript attached, asks for a named compliance officer.
  • Day 4: Reply from a named officer. "We need proof of address dated within 90 days." Reader uploads fresh bank PDF.
  • Day 5: Payout processed, Skrill lands in 4 hours.
Total time: 5 days. Above the normal 24 hour window, but fully resolved without needing a regulator or chargeback.
That is the ladder working as designed. If Day 4 had come back with "still reviewing", the next step would have been AskGamblers on Day 6, then regulator on Day 12.

SafeBet: play within limits​

A stalled payout is stressful, especially if it's a significant win. Stress plus gambling access is exactly the combination that drives impulsive play while waiting.
Step away from the account while you escalate. Use the time to verify documents, gather evidence, and work the ladder.
In the UK, GamCare is free at 0808 8020 133 or gamcare.org.uk live chat. BetBlocker gives you cross-device blocking while a case is live: betblocker.org.
If waiting for a payout is pushing you to play elsewhere or deposit more to "make up for it", that is a signal worth pausing on.

Quick checklist before you escalate​

  1. Am I inside the normal threshold for my method? (Crypto 2h, Skrill 24h, bank 2 business days.)
  2. Do I have a bonus active that's blocking the cashout?
  3. Is my KYC fully complete with documents dated within 90 days?
  4. Did I deposit and withdraw with the same method, or am I hitting a same-method policy?
  5. Did I submit on a Friday evening for a site with weekday-only fiat queues?
Clear all five of those first. If you're still past the threshold, start the ladder.
Got a stuck cashout right now? Post the brand, the method, the amount range (no need for exact figures), and how long it's been pending.
I'll help you figure out which step of the ladder you should be on.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top