Rainbet Casino terms explained for UK readers

This terms page explains the rules a Rainbet player should understand before registering, depositing, claiming bonuses or withdrawing. It does not replace the live terms inside the platform. It gives a practical reading of the areas that usually affect real-money play: account accuracy, promotions, crypto payments, KYC, sportsbook use and responsible gambling.

Account rules

Players should register with accurate personal data and keep control of their own account. Email, name, address, date of birth and payment information may be checked during account review.
Shared accounts, false details, duplicate accounts or payment methods belonging to another person can lead to review. If the account information changes, it should be updated through the proper account or support route.

Bonus rules

Rainbet promotions have their own requirements. Wager Lock uses a $30 minimum, $700 maximum per tier and 40x wagering on combined deposit and bonus funds. No Wager Lock uses an unlock formula based on wager amount.
Players should choose promotions before depositing and contact support before betting if an eligible bonus does not appear. Betting first can make a missing bonus impossible to claim later.

Payment rules

Crypto transactions require exact coin and network selection. BTC, ETH, LTC, XRP, SOL, TRX, BNB, USDT and USDC can behave differently depending on fees, confirmation speed and wallet support.
Rainbet lists a $15 minimum withdrawal and a 1x wager lock on crypto deposits. KYC or transaction review can apply before funds are sent.

Verification

Rainbet can request documents to verify identity, location or payment ownership. Possible documents include passport or national ID card, bank card statement and proof linked to an address.
Documents should be uploaded only through the official account route. A suspicious third-party document request should be ignored.

Responsible gambling

Players should use limits, breaks and exclusion tools when needed. Gambling involves financial risk and should never be treated as income.