By Ginger Perry, updated April 28, 2026
A 200% deposit match looks like free money until the withdrawal button stays greyed out. Most players realize too late that a large balance is meaningless if it’s locked behind a 35x wagering wall. To understand the real value of a bonus, you have to look past the headline and calculate the Real Dollar Loss.
Take a standard $500 deposit. The casino adds $1,000, giving you a $1,500 starting point. With a 35x requirement on the total amount, you must wager $52,500 before seeing a cent of that profit. On a standard 96% RTP slot, the house edge will statistically chew through $2,100 of your bankroll during that process, double what the casino gave you in the first place.
Wagering requirements are the number of times you must bet your bonus before it becomes withdrawable cash. Most are structured to cost you more than they give. This piece runs the numbers.
How Wagering Requirements Are Calculated?
Most casinos set wagering requirements between 25x and 50x. Some promotional offers push as high as 70x. The headline multiplier, though, tells you almost nothing until you know which method the casino is using to apply it.
There are two calculation methods, and the difference between them is significant:
- Method 1 Bonus Only: $200 bonus × 35x = $7,000 total wager required
- Method 2 Bonus + Deposit Combined: ($200 deposit + $200 bonus) × 35x = $14,000 total wager required
Same headline multiplier. Twice the obligation. The distinction between these two methods is almost never emphasised in the promotional copy. It appears in the terms and conditions, usually in the seventh paragraph.
Method 2 is the more common structure at most casinos. When a casino advertises a 35x requirement on a 100% deposit match, a significant portion of those offers apply the multiplier to the combined amount. That 35x is functionally a 70x requirement on the bonus itself.
Casinos use wagering requirements for a straightforward reason: the house edge requires sufficient bet volume to statistically recapture a meaningful portion of every bonus issued.
Without them, a player could deposit, claim a bonus, and withdraw before the mathematics had a chance to work. The wagering requirement acts as a filter; it dictates whether the bonus carries a positive or negative expected value.
The Hidden Variable: Game Contribution Rates
Once you know your total wager requirement, you still don’t know your true obligation. That depends on which games you play, and casinos penalise game choice in a way that is almost never mentioned in the headline offer.
Every casino assigns a game contribution rate: the percentage of each bet that counts toward clearing the wagering requirement. Slots typically contribute 100%. Table games are penalised heavily, often sitting at 10% or less, with some excluded entirely.
The reason is economic. Low-house-edge games generate less revenue per dollar wagered. Restricting their contribution rate forces players to move to higher-margin slots to clear the bonus.
Typical contribution rates across game types:
| Game | Contribution Rate |
|---|---|
| Slots | 100% |
| Blackjack | 10% or less |
| Roulette | 5-20% |
| Baccarat | 10% or excluded |
| Video Poker | 5-25% |
| Live Casino | 10-20% |
The formula that reveals the true obligation:
True Wager Required = (Bonus × Multiplier) ÷ Game Contribution Rate
Applied to a $200 bonus at 35x:
- Playing Slots at 100%: ($200 × 35) ÷ 1.00 = $7,000 true wager required
- Playing Blackjack at 10%: ($200 × 35) ÷ 0.10 = $70,000 true wager required
The same bonus costs 10 times more if you prefer table games. This is almost never stated in the promotional copy. A player who deposits to play blackjack and claims a standard welcome offer has signed up for a requirement that is effectively unplayable at any reasonable session pace.
What the House Edge Takes Back: The Real Dollar Cost
Once you know the true wager required, the final step is straightforward. Multiply it by the house edge, the percentage the casino statistically retains per dollar wagered, and you get the expected player loss during the wagering period.
Formula: Bonus × Multiplier × House Edge % = Expected Loss
At 96% RTP, the house edge is 4%. At 98% RTP, it is 2%.
Expected loss reference table: $200 bonus:
| Wagering Req. | At 96% RTP (industry avg.) | At 98% RTP (high-RTP slot) |
| 20x | $160 expected loss | $80 expected loss |
| 30x | $240 expected loss | $120 expected loss |
| 35x | $280 expected loss | $140 expected loss |
| 40x | $320 expected loss | $160 expected loss |
| 50x | $400 expected loss | $200 expected loss |
Once the multiplier passes 20x, the statistical loss outweighs the bonus itself, turning the promotion into a net loss for the player.
Full worked example:
- $500 deposit → 200% bonus = $1,000 bonus
- 35x wagering requirement (bonus only)
- 96% RTP slot
- Total wager required: $1,000 × 35 = $35,000
- House edge: 4% per dollar wagered
- Expected loss during wagering: $35,000 × 4% = $1,400
To clear a $1,000 bonus, the player is statistically expected to lose $1,400. The bonus does not have a positive expected value. It never did.
Three secondary traps most players discover too late:
Max bet rule. Most casinos cap bets at $1-$5 per spin during bonus wagering. Exceeding this limit can void the entire bonus, including any accumulated winnings, without warning. At a $5 max bet on a 35x requirement with a $500 bonus, you need to complete 3,500 individual bets before the clock runs out. Almost no promotional headline mentions this.
Expiry window. Bonuses typically expire in 7-30 days. The pace of math is unforgiving. At $5 per spin, 3,500 bets inside a 7-day window means 500 spins per day, every day, to stay on pace. Many players simply cannot maintain that volume and forfeit the bonus along with any winnings they accumulated during the attempt.
Cashout cap. Many bonuses limit the maximum withdrawal from bonus play to 2x-5x the bonus value. A $200 bonus with a 3x cap means you can never withdraw more than $600 from that activity, regardless of how much you actually win.
What a Structurally Different Bonus Model Looks Like?
The standard wagering requirement model exists because it works for the casino. The multiplier gate ensures sufficient volume for the house edge to function statistically before any bonus converts to cash. That is the design intent, and it operates exactly as intended.
A small number of crypto-native platforms have moved away from this upfront multiplier structure toward progressive unlock models, where the bonus converts incrementally as the player wagers rather than sitting locked behind a single threshold that most players never reach.
Moonbet’s Moondrop is one example of this structure in practice. The platform’s welcome offer matches the first deposit at 200%, up to $100,000. Instead of a wagering multiplier that holds the entire bonus captive until a single threshold is crossed, the bonus starts in a Locked Moondrop Wallet and unlocks automatically as you play at a fixed rate of $10 for every $1,000 wagered.
Once unlocked, funds become claimable with one click and move directly to your Main Wallet as real, withdrawable cash. There is no locked endpoint. There is no all-or-nothing expiry cliff.
The system also runs two parallel reward engines. Moonrake delivers instant accumulation on every wager in real time, with no wagering requirement and no minimum claim threshold.
Moonback returns a percentage of net weekly losses, calculated at tier-based rates ranging from 4% at the entry level up to 8% at the top tier. Both run automatically. No opt-ins required.
The player knows, at any point, exactly how much bonus has been converted and how much remains locked. The eligibility rules are published on a single page with no external terms document.
Moonbet operates under an Anjouan Gambling License. CEO David Jenkins has described the platform’s position plainly: the goal is to compete on math, not on headline bonus numbers designed to attract attention before the terms are read.
This is not a verdict on which model is better. It is a structural observation. The incremental unlock mechanism changes the information dynamic even when a volume requirement still exists. The player can see the conversion happening. That changes the decision environment before the next deposit.
How to Evaluate Any Casino Bonus Before You Claim It?
You can do that in six steps. Run all of them before depositing.
1. Calculate the true total wager
Multiply the bonus by the stated multiplier. If the requirement applies to the deposit plus bonus, apply the multiplier to the combined amount. That figure is your baseline wagering obligation before game choice is factored in.
2. Check the contribution rate for your preferred game
Apply the formula: (Bonus × Multiplier) ÷ Contribution Rate. If you prefer blackjack at a 10% contribution rate, your true wager requirement is 10 times the headline number. If your preferred game is excluded entirely, the bonus is not compatible with how you play.
3. Calculate expected loss during wagering
Multiply the true wager required by the house edge percentage of your chosen game. If that figure exceeds the bonus value, the bonus has negative expected value. Do not claim it, expecting to come out ahead.
4. Find the cashout cap before depositing
Locate the maximum withdrawal from bonus play in the full terms. A 2x cap on a $200 bonus means the absolute ceiling is $400, regardless of how well you perform during the wagering period.
5. Verify the max bet rule
If bets are capped during wagering, commonly at $5 per spin, calculate whether your session pace allows you to clear the requirement within the expiry window. If it doesn’t, the bonus will expire before it clears.
6. Set a time-to-clear estimate
Divide the total wager required by your typical session volume. If you average $200 of wagering per session and the requirement is $7,000, that is 35 sessions. Factor in the expiry date and decide whether that is realistic before accepting.
Quick-reference summary:
| Rating | Wagering Req. | Calculation Method | Game Coverage | Expiry | Cashout Cap |
| ✅ Acceptable | Under 20x | Bonus only | All games contribute | 30+ days | Not restricted |
| ⚠️ Caution | 20x-35x | Deposit + bonus | Table games restricted | 14 days | 3x-5x |
| 🚩 Red Flag | Over 35x | Deposit + bonus | Most games excluded | Under 7 days | 2x or less |
The Math Has Always Been There
Wagering requirements are a mathematical instrument. They are calibrated around the statistical certainty that most players will not run the numbers before they deposit and that the house edge will do its work reliably across sufficient bet volume.
Bonuses can have positive expected value. A low multiplier, a high-RTP game, and a bonus-only calculation can produce a genuine edge. But those are not the offers being marketed most aggressively. The loudest bonuses are typically the ones with the worst expected value, because the headline number is doing work that the terms and conditions quietly undo.
While global averages sit at 35x, the UK Gambling Commission‘s 10x wagering cap (effective January 2026) has forced a massive shift in that specific market.
The question worth asking before your next deposit is not how big the bonus is. It is how much it will cost you to claim it. Crypto-native platforms are beginning to introduce structural alternatives that make those conversion mechanics visible from the first wager.
Responsible Gambling Resources: National Council on Problem Gambling (US): 1-800-522-4700 | www.ncpgambling.org GamCare (UK): 0808 8020 133 | www.gamcare.org.uk BeGambleAware: www.begambleaware.org Gambling Therapy (International): www.gamblingtherapy.org

