What is a crypto casino?
A crypto casino is an online casino that takes deposits and pays winnings in cryptocurrency rather than fiat. That one change has big consequences — here's how they actually work.
How a crypto casino works
You deposit crypto (most often USDT, sometimes Bitcoin or Ethereum) to an address the casino gives you, play games credited in that balance, and withdraw back on-chain. Because settlement is on a public blockchain, deposits and payouts are independently visible — the basis for the on-chain transparency this site is built on.
How it differs from a traditional online casino
Traditional casinos use banks and card processors, so they're tied to regulated payment rails, KYC and chargebacks. Crypto casinos settle peer-to-blockchain: faster payouts, fewer payment blocks, often lighter KYC — but also less regulatory protection. There's usually no deposit insurance and no regulator to recover funds from, which shifts the burden of due diligence onto you.
Provably fair
Many crypto casinos offer provably-fair games, where a cryptographic commitment lets you verify each outcome wasn't manipulated. That's a genuine advantage over traditional online casinos — though it proves game fairness, not that the operator will pay you.
What you can play
The game menu mirrors a regular online casino plus a crypto-native category. Slots from major studios; live dealer tables (blackjack, roulette, baccarat) streamed in real time; classic table games; and the crypto-native originals — crash, dice, plinko, mines — which are usually provably fair, meaning you can verify each result. Many also run a sportsbook. The defining extra over a fiat casino isn't the games themselves but that the money rail and (for originals) the fairness are both on-chain-verifiable.
Who runs them and how they make money
A crypto casino is a business like any other: it profits from the house edge built into every game, so over time the operator wins and players' balances trend down — the games being fair doesn't change that. Most operators sit behind offshore holding companies with a light-touch licence (commonly Curaçao), and they fund growth heavily through affiliates and streamer promotion. Understanding the model matters because it explains the two things to watch: whether the operator stays solvent enough to pay you, and why so much marketing ("best casino", "biggest bonus") is paid placement rather than independent assessment.
The trade-off
The core trade-off is freedom for self-responsibility. You get fast, global, low-friction play; you give up the safety net. That's why verifiable signals — on-chain reserves, independent trust ratings, real withdrawal activity — matter so much. 18+ only; gamble responsibly.
FAQ
An online casino that accepts deposits and pays winnings in cryptocurrency (commonly USDT) instead of fiat, settling on a public blockchain. This makes deposits and payouts independently verifiable.
It varies by jurisdiction. Most operate under offshore licences (Curaçao, Anjouan) and many restrict certain countries. Legality depends on where you are — check your local rules.
From the house edge built into every game — over time the operator profits and player balances trend down, regardless of whether games are provably fair. Many also rely heavily on affiliate and streamer marketing, which is why a lot of "best casino" content is paid placement.
Methodology & disclaimer. Figures are derived from on-chain transfers attributed to wallets we associate with each operator, plus third-party ratings shown with their source. Blockchain attribution carries inherent uncertainty, and reserves are an all-chain best-effort estimate from mapped wallets — coverage varies by operator. These pages describe observed activity and third-party data only; they are not an endorsement of any operator and not a statement on any operator's solvency, legality, fairness, or safety, and nothing here is financial, legal or investment advice. See how we attribute on-chain activity · about us · report a correction. Data updates roughly every 30 minutes. 18+ only. Gambling can be addictive — see responsible gambling resources.