A bonus is a marketing cost the operator expects to profit from. That does not make offers worthless — some carry genuine value — but the headline number is never the real number. Everything depends on the terms: wagering requirements, game weighting, time limits and max-cashout caps. This guide teaches you to read those terms so a "100% up to $200" offer means something concrete.
Types of bonus
A deposit match (e.g. "100% up to $200") doubles your deposit with bonus funds. A no-deposit bonus gives a small amount of bonus money or spins just for signing up — low value but risk-free. Free spins come bundled with slots offers, and free bets are the sportsbook equivalent, refunding a losing wager once.
Each type behaves differently under the terms. The headline size tells you almost nothing on its own; the conditions attached are what determine whether an offer is worth claiming.
Wagering requirements
Wagering requirements (also called playthrough or rollover) are the most important term. A "35x" requirement on a $100 bonus means you must place $3,500 in bets before you can withdraw the bonus or its winnings. The higher the multiple, the harder the bonus is to clear.
Check whether the requirement applies to the bonus only, or to deposit plus bonus (much harder). As a rough guide, anything up to 35x is reasonable, 40x+ is demanding, and very high multiples often mean the bonus is effectively unclaimable.
Game weighting and bet limits
Not every game contributes equally to wagering. Slots usually count 100%, but table games like blackjack and roulette often count 10–20% or are excluded entirely — so clearing a bonus on blackjack can take many times more turnover than the headline multiple suggests.
Max-bet rules also apply: exceed the maximum stake while a bonus is active (commonly $5) and you can forfeit the entire bonus. Read the weighting table and the bet cap before you start, not after.
Time limits and max cashout
Bonuses expire. A 7-day window to clear a 35x requirement can demand an unrealistic pace of play; a 30-day window is far more achievable. Miss the deadline and the bonus and its winnings are voided.
Max-cashout caps quietly limit the upside: a no-deposit bonus may let you win only up to, say, $50 no matter how much you actually accumulate. Always find the cap — it is often the difference between a good offer and a token one.
Is a bonus worth claiming?
Combine the terms to judge real value: a modest match with low wagering, fair game weighting, a generous time limit and a high or no cashout cap can be excellent — while a giant headline with 50x rollover, 10% table weighting and a 7-day clock is often a trap.
You are never obliged to take a bonus. If the terms do not suit how you actually play, decline it and play with your own funds. Our reviews translate the small print into the real value behind each operator's offer.
Perguntas frequentes
What does a wagering requirement mean?
It is how many times you must bet a bonus before withdrawing. "35x" on a $100 bonus means $3,500 of wagers. Lower is better; check whether it applies to the bonus alone or deposit plus bonus.
Are casino bonuses worth it?
Sometimes. Value depends entirely on the terms — wagering, game weighting, time limit and max cashout. A modest offer with fair terms can beat a huge one with punishing conditions. You are never required to take a bonus.
Why does my table-game play not clear the bonus?
Game weighting. Slots usually count 100% toward wagering, but blackjack and roulette often count only 10–20% or are excluded, so they clear a bonus far more slowly.
What is a max cashout on a bonus?
A cap on how much you can withdraw from bonus winnings — common on no-deposit offers (e.g. $50). Always check it; it often decides whether an offer is genuinely worthwhile.