V.Vegas Withdrawal
V.Vegas Casino Withdrawal/Verification
Payment Methods
The payment side of V.Vegas covers a decent spread of both traditional and modern options. On the card side, Visa and Mastercard are supported. E-wallets include Skrill, Neteller, MiFinity, Jeton, and AstroPay. The crypto selection is notably broad: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tether, USDC, Binance Coin, Dogecoin, Litecoin, TRON, and Toncoin are all listed.

Deposits
The minimum deposit is €10 across the board, which is accessible. A few ground rules apply from the start. All deposits must come from an account or card registered in the depositing person's own name – third-party deposits are not accepted under any circumstances, and that includes payments from friends, relatives, or partners. If a security check flags a violation of this, winnings are forfeited and the account is blocked.
Deposited funds are not covered by any banking insurance scheme, earn no interest, and the account itself is not treated as a bank account in any regulatory sense.
There's also a specific rule around SMS deposits. Only one phone number can be registered for this method, and only half of the amount added via SMS actually reaches the account balance. Loans from phone operators are not permitted. If someone deposits via SMS with a negative operator balance or a loan facility, the account is blacklisted and blocked, and no withdrawals are allowed.
Withdrawals
The minimum withdrawal matches the deposit floor at €10. Withdrawals must be made using the same method that was used to deposit – no mixing methods. All profile information must be filled out before a withdrawal request is submitted, and at least 1 deposit must have been made.
Once the withdrawal amount reaches €1,000 or more, identity verification becomes mandatory. A copy or digital photograph of a passport or ID card is required at that point, though the passport number can be obscured in the image. The casino may request additional documents beyond that, depending on the circumstances.
There's a specific condition tied to turnover. If the total amount wagered is less than twice (x2) the deposit amount, V.Vegas reserves the right to withhold 20% of the withdrawal to cover payment processing costs. That's an unusual clause and one that could catch someone off guard, particularly if they deposited, played briefly, and then requested a withdrawal without meeting that x2 turnover threshold.
The casino also reserves the right to charge fees for withdrawing funds that were never put into play, so depositing and immediately withdrawing without any betting activity may incur a deduction.
There's another clause worth flagging around large cumulative withdrawals. If the combined total of a withdrawal request, current account balance, and lifetime withdrawals is at least x20 greater than the total deposited across the account's history, withdrawals may be capped at €5,000 per 30-day period.
Withdrawal Timeframes
Processing times are tiered by withdrawal amount, all conditional on KYC completion. The casino processes withdrawals manually, which means timing depends on how busy the financial team is at any given point, that's stated openly in the terms.
For amounts up to €499, approval comes within 5 minutes to 12 hours, with a maximum of 2 working days. For amounts between €500 and €4,999, the window ranges from 5 minutes to 48 hours, capped at 5 working days. Withdrawals between €5,000 and €29,999 carry a processing window of 5 minutes to 96 hours, with a maximum of 14 working days. Anything above €30,000 also falls within the 5-minute to 96-hour approval window, but the upper limit extends to 30 working days.
Weekends and public holidays are excluded from all of these timeframes, and the casino is clear that once it approves a withdrawal, any further delays caused by payment processors or banks are outside its control. There's also a practical note buried in the terms: the withdrawn amount needs to remain in the account balance until it's actually processed, dipping that amount below while waiting for a withdrawal to clear could cause complications.
Fraud and Security Conditions
V.Vegas takes a firm stance on payment fraud. Suspicious activity, stolen card use, chargebacks, and other fraudulent behavior can result in account blocking, payout reversals, and recovery of winnings. The casino states it may report fraudulent activity to relevant authorities and can use collection services to recover payments. It's also explicit that it bears no liability for unauthorized card use, even if the card in question was reported stolen, so the burden of securing payment credentials sits entirely with the account holder.
Attempting to reverse a deposit through a third party, essentially initiating a chargeback, is listed as grounds for immediate account closure.
Verification
Verification at V.Vegas follows a structured due diligence process, and understanding when it kicks in matters more than most people expect. It's not something that only happens when something goes wrong, there are specific thresholds and circumstances that trigger it as a routine part of how the casino operates.
When Verification Is Required
The casino initiates what it calls Standard Verification under 4 distinct circumstances. The first is straightforward: once the total value of transactions on an account reaches or exceeds €1,000 or its USD equivalent, verification becomes mandatory. That threshold can be reached faster than expected if deposits and withdrawals accumulate over multiple sessions.
The second trigger is risk-based. If an internal risk assessment flags an account as presenting a significant risk of money laundering or terrorist financing, verification will be requested regardless of the transaction total. The third is behavioral: if activity on the account contains factors that raise suspicion of Terms and Conditions violations, the casino can initiate the process. The fourth is a catch-all: verification can be applied at any time if casino personnel consider it necessary, without needing to meet any of the above criteria.
That last point is worth sitting with. It means there's no hard guarantee that staying under €1,000 or maintaining clean account activity will prevent a verification request. The casino retains the discretion to request it at any time.
Documents Required
When Standard Verification is applied, the following documents may be requested:
- A copy or photograph of a government-issued identification document.
- A photograph of the payment card used or intended to be used for deposits. The cardholder's name must be fully visible and cannot be obscured in any way. The CVV code and the middle digits of the card number – everything except the first 6 and last 4 digits, may be hidden or covered.
- A photograph of the account holder physically holding the identification documents submitted for verification.
- In some situations, proof of address – this can be a utility bill, telephone bill, or another document that is considered sufficient under local legislation to confirm a residential address.
- In some situations, a bank statement or a letter from an employer or duty station.
- In some cases, a tax assessment notice.
- A photograph of the account holder holding a handwritten note containing the registered email address and the date of the photo request, along with a confirmation code provided by the casino.
- Any other documents or information that may be required, depending on the specific circumstances of the case.
A Few Things Worth Noting
The card photo requirement is one of the more specific asks in this process. The name on the card must match the name on the account, no exceptions, and it cannot be hidden under any circumstances.
The selfie-with-documents requirement and the handwritten note photograph are increasingly common in online casino KYC processes, but they can still catch people off guard if they're not prepared. The handwritten note, in particular, requiring the registered email, the specific date, and a confirmation code, is designed to prevent the submission of pre-existing or recycled identity photos.
Beyond documents, the casino also reserves the right to request a live call with the support team, including a video call, if warranted.
How to Verify Your Account at V.Vegas Casino
Log Into Your Account
Head to V.Vegas and sign in. Verification is tied to your account activity, so having your account open and accessible is the starting point for submitting anything else.
Watch for the Verification Trigger
Verification becomes mandatory once your total transaction value reaches or exceeds €1,000. It can also be triggered by a risk assessment, suspicious account behaviour, or simply at the casino's discretion, so don't assume it only applies at that €1,000 threshold.
Prepare Your Identity Document
A copy or photograph of a government-issued ID (passport or ID card) is required. This is the foundation of the process and will be needed in almost every case.
Photograph Your Payment Card
Take a clear photo of the card used for deposits. The cardholder's name must be fully visible at all times, it cannot be covered. You may hide the CVV and the middle digits, keeping only the first 6 and last 4 digits visible.
Submit a Selfie With Your Documents
A photograph of yourself physically holding the submitted identity documents is required. This confirms the documents belong to the person operating the account.
Prepare a Handwritten Note Photo
Write down your registered email address, the date of the photo request, and the confirmation code provided by the casino. Photograph yourself holding this note. This step is specifically designed to prevent the submission of recycled or pre-existing identity photos.
Provide Supporting Documents if Requested
Depending on the circumstances, additional documents may be needed – proof of address such as a utility or telephone bill, a bank statement, a letter from an employer, or, in some cases, a tax assessment notice. These aren't always required, but should be prepared in case.
Complete a Video Call if Required
If the submitted documents aren't considered sufficient, the casino reserves the right to request a live call with the support team, including a video call. This is not a standard step for most accounts, but is written into the terms and can be applied at any point.
Frequently Asked Questions
Both sit at €10, regardless of the payment method used.
No. Third-party deposits are strictly prohibited. If one is detected during a security check, all winnings are forfeited and the account is blocked immediately.
Yes. If the total amount wagered is less than twice the deposit amount, V.Vegas can withhold 20% of the withdrawal to cover payment processing costs. It's an unusual clause and one worth being aware of before requesting a cashout.
It depends on the amount. Up to €499 takes up to 2 working days. €500 to €4,999 takes up to 5 working days. €5,000 to €29,999 takes up to 14 working days. Anything above €30,000 can take up to 30 working days. Weekends and public holidays are excluded from all of these timeframes.
No. All withdrawals are processed manually by the financial team, so timing depends on how busy they are at any given point.
Yes. The withdrawn amount needs to remain in the balance until it's actually processed. Dropping that amount below before the withdrawal clears could cause complications.