← All guides

Crypto casino withdrawal fees, explained

Most crypto casinos charge no platform withdrawal fee and pass on only the blockchain network fee, but a minority deduct their own fee from your withdrawal — so the real cost is “network fee, sometimes plus a house fee”, and it’s worth checking which before you cash out.

There are two separate charges. The network fee is unavoidable and set by the blockchain, not the casino — it’s small on Tron, Solana or Lightning and larger on Bitcoin or Ethereum mainnet. A platform fee is charged by the casino itself; most reputable crypto casinos advertise “no fees” meaning no platform fee, but a few (for example Wild.io states a fee is deducted from your balance) do charge one. Some also offer tiered “faster” withdrawals that simply pay a higher network fee.

To pay less: withdraw on a low-fee network, avoid lots of tiny withdrawals (each pays a fee), and check whether the operator adds a platform fee. We label each operator’s fee model — no fee, network-only, or a fee deducted — so you’re not surprised at the cashier.

Key points

  • Two charges: the network fee (always) and a possible platform fee.
  • Network fee is set by the chain — cheap on Tron/Solana/Lightning.
  • Most casinos charge no platform fee; a few (e.g. Wild.io) deduct one.
  • “Faster” withdrawal tiers usually just pay a higher network fee.
  • Batch withdrawals and pick a low-fee network to pay less.

FAQ

Do crypto casinos charge withdrawal fees?

Most charge no platform fee and pass on only the blockchain network fee. A minority deduct their own fee — we label each operator’s fee model so you can see which.

Related

18+. Gambling involves risk — gamble responsibly (BeGambleAware.org · GamCare.org.uk).