Rich Casino caps withdrawals at $4,000 per week, which immediately signals the restrictive nature of their banking setup. I found just four payment methods when I checked the cashier – bank transfers, Visa, MasterCard, and Neosurf. For a market where players expect crypto options and faster processing, this feels quite limited. The minimum deposit of $20 for bank transfers is reasonable, though card deposits can start from smaller amounts.
Withdrawal speeds are where things get frustrating. While deposits with cards happen instantly, getting money out takes between 24 and 120 hours. That’s up to five days of waiting, which is slow by today’s standards. I couldn’t find any mention of withdrawal fees, which is actually a relief given how restrictive everything else feels. The reversal period allows up to four days to cancel a withdrawal, which some players might see as a temptation they don’t need.
What struck me most was how basic the whole banking experience feels. There’s no crypto, no e-wallets, and the processing times haven’t kept up with what players expect in 2025. The $4,000 weekly limit might work for casual players, but anyone wanting to withdraw bigger wins will find it painfully slow. For a casino that’s been around since 2008, the banking options feel stuck in the past.