Payments & Withdrawals

Deposit And Withdrawal Processing Times At BetTOM

Deposit And Withdrawal Limits At BetTOM

BetTOM sets deposit limits by payment method and currency. For UK players using GBP, card deposits (Visa and Mastercard) start from £10 and allow higher single transactions than e-wallet deposits, while bank transfer deposits start from £20 because of processing and reconciliation rules. The casino blocks deposits that exceed the per-transaction cap and asks you to split the amount into separate deposits within the daily limit.

Withdrawal limits depend on the same method used for the deposit and on the operator’s cashout caps. BetTOM processes card and e-wallet withdrawals in GBP with a minimum of £20, while bank transfer withdrawals start from £50 due to bank fees and payout batching. If a single withdrawal exceeds the maximum, BetTOM pays it in parts until the full balance is cleared within the daily payout ceiling.

BetTOM does not charge a casino fee on deposits or withdrawals. Card deposits in GBP (Visa and Mastercard) post for the full amount you enter, and the cashier shows the deposit total without an added BetTOM charge. BetTOM also keeps the same rule for UK-friendly e-wallet deposits such as PayPal, Skrill, and Neteller: the casino side fee is £0.

Payment system fees can still apply outside the casino. Some UK banks treat gambling card deposits as cash-like transactions and add a cash-advance fee and/or interest from day one; this is set by the card issuer, not BetTOM. E-wallet providers can charge their own costs for currency conversion (for example, if your wallet balance is not in GBP), wallet-to-card transfers, or international transfers; these charges sit in the provider’s tariff and do not appear as a BetTOM fee.

On withdrawals, BetTOM processes payouts in GBP without adding a casino fee, but intermediary fees can reduce the received amount in specific routes. Bank transfers can pick up correspondent bank charges if the transfer is routed outside the UK, and some banks charge a receiving fee even for inbound payments. With cards and e-wallets, the most common non-casino cost is conversion when the receiving account is not in GBP, set by the bank or the wallet provider.