Payment Method Speed Guide
The payment method you choose can be the difference between a 15-minute payout and a 5-day wait. Here is what I measured across 47 withdrawal tests.
Speed by Payment Method
Fastest method tested
Best Australian fiat option
Slowed by card network processing
Slowest method at every casino
Cryptocurrency Withdrawals
Cryptocurrency is the undisputed speed champion across every casino I tested. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin withdrawals consistently outperformed all other methods, often by a factor of ten or more compared to bank transfers.
The reason is simple: crypto transactions bypass traditional banking intermediaries entirely. Once a casino approves your withdrawal and broadcasts the transaction, confirmation depends solely on the blockchain network. Bitcoin typically confirms in 10-20 minutes, Ethereum in 2-5 minutes, and Litecoin in around 2.5 minutes.
Crypto Considerations for Australian Players
- You need a crypto wallet (hardware or software) before you can receive funds
- Exchange rate fluctuation means your AUD value may shift between withdrawal and conversion
- Network fees vary — Bitcoin can cost $2-$15 per transaction depending on congestion, while Litecoin is typically under $0.05
- Converting back to AUD adds an exchange step that takes 10-30 minutes via most Australian exchanges
- For tax purposes, the ATO treats crypto casino winnings the same as fiat — keep records
PayID Withdrawals
PayID is the standout performer for players who prefer to stay in Australian dollars. Built on the New Payments Platform (NPP), PayID enables near-instant transfers between Australian bank accounts. The limiting factor is not the payment network — it is how quickly the casino processes your request and initiates the transfer.
At Zoccer, my PayID withdrawal was processed in 31 minutes. At LuckyOnes, it took 2 hours 15 minutes. Same payment method, vastly different results. This tells you that the casino's internal processing queue is the bottleneck, not PayID itself.
PayID Tips
- Ensure your PayID is registered with your bank before requesting a withdrawal
- Some casinos require PayID linked to the same name as your casino account for verification
- PayID transfers are limited to Australian bank accounts — international players cannot use this method
- There are no network fees for PayID transfers, making it the most cost-effective fiat option
Credit and Debit Card Withdrawals
Visa and Mastercard withdrawals are available at most casinos but carry inherent speed disadvantages. The card networks process refunds (which is how casino withdrawals appear) in batches, and your issuing bank adds its own processing time on top.
In my testing, card withdrawals took 1-3 business days at Lightning casinos and up to 5 days at slower operators. The casino might process your request in minutes, but the funds sit in a card network queue that neither you nor the casino can accelerate.
Card-Specific Issues
- Some Australian banks block gambling transactions — check with your bank first
- Withdrawals appear as refunds, not deposits, on your statement
- Weekend submissions typically do not process until the next business day
- Higher minimum withdrawal amounts at most casinos ($50-$100 vs $20 for crypto)
Bank Transfer Withdrawals
Traditional bank transfers (also called wire transfers or EFT) are the slowest option at every single casino tested. Processing times ranged from 2 business days at BetNinja to over 5 business days at Goldspin. The multi-step process — casino approval, intermediary bank processing, and receiving bank processing — creates compounding delays.
My recommendation: avoid bank transfers unless it is your only option. PayID uses the same destination (your bank account) but arrives orders of magnitude faster. If your casino offers PayID, there is no rational reason to choose a standard bank transfer.
E-Wallets: Skrill and Neteller
Skrill and Neteller occupy the middle ground between crypto speed and card delays. At casinos that support them (Zoccer, LuckyOnes, VegasNow), e-wallet withdrawals typically clear within 2-8 hours. The funds arrive in your e-wallet account, and you then transfer to your bank — which adds another step but gives you immediate access to the funds within the wallet.
The downside is that e-wallets charge fees for both deposits and withdrawals, and converting from your wallet to your Australian bank account may incur additional currency conversion charges depending on how the wallet is configured.
My Recommendation
For the absolute fastest cashout: Bitcoin at BetNinja. For the fastest AUD option: PayID at Zoccer. For convenience without speed sacrifice: PayID at any Lightning-rated casino. Avoid bank transfers and card withdrawals if speed matters to you at all.
For more information on how I test, visit the methodology page.