Max cashout on casino bonuses: the cap that cuts your EV

Max cashout limits how much you can withdraw from a bonus. Here is which casinos cap low and how much EV that costs.

By Maikel Slomp··4 min

Max cashout reads like fine print, but it is often the single biggest EV-killer inside a matchbonus. The mechanism is simple: a cap sets the maximum amount you can ever withdraw from bonus money, and anything you win above that line is confiscated when you request a payout. So a deal advertised as "100% match up to €500" with a €200 cashout cap is functionally a €200 deal, not a €500 deal.

The wagering requirement you grind through still applies to the full bonus amount, but the upside you can actually keep is capped. That asymmetry, full risk, capped reward, is where the house edge quietly collects extra revenue.

How max cashout works

Two formulas dominate. The first is a fixed amount: cashout is capped at, say, €200 regardless of what you deposited or won. The second is a multiplier of the bonus, most often expressed as N times the bonus value.

Multiplier cap
max_withdrawal = N × bonus_value

N is typically 5 to 10 at offshore operators. Anything under 10× starts to bite on high-variance slots.

A 10x cap on a €100 bonus equals €1,000 maximum withdrawal. Lower numbers are worse for the player. A 5x cap on a €100 bonus is functionally a €500 ceiling on a slot session that can easily produce €2,000 spikes. Free spin winnings often carry their own separate cap, sometimes €100 regardless of what the spins actually paid out.

Any cap below 10x the bonus starts to bite hard, because slot variance regularly takes balances above that line during a normal wagering run. The cap then quietly trims your upside without touching your downside.

The EV impact

Worked example. You take a €500 matchbonus with a €200 cashout cap, clear the wagering, and your balance lands at €800. Of that €800, only €200 is actually yours. The €600 above the cap evaporates the moment you click withdraw. The bonus marketing quoted €500 in headline value, the cap silently rewrote it to €200.

Compare that to a Dutch matchbonus with no max cashout in the terms: clear the same wagering, hit the same €800 balance, and €800 is what you withdraw. The expected value calculation has to subtract the capped upside from the headline match, otherwise it systematically overstates the bonus.

This is why the cap matters more for high-variance slots than for low-variance ones: high variance produces the big spikes that the cap is designed to confiscate.

€500 match with €200 cashout cap

Balance ends at €800 after wagering

Headline bonus€500
Cashout cap€200
Final balance€800
Evaporated above cap€600
withdrawn€200

NL matchbonus with no cap

Same wagering, same €800 balance

Headline bonus€100-200
Cashout capnone
Final balance€800
Kept in full€800
withdrawn€800

The Dutch picture

Good news for KSA-licensed players. Across the 26 casinos we track in the Dutch dataset, the recorded max cashout value is null for every welcome bonus. Operators like LeoVegas, Jacks.nl, and BetCity do not impose an explicit cashout ceiling in their KSA-filed welcome bonus terms.

KSA casinos tracked26
With welcome-bonus cap0
Offshore typical5-10×multiplier of bonus

That is a meaningful difference from the offshore and broader EU market, where caps of 5x to 10x the bonus are common. The reason is partly regulatory: the KSA framework prefers transparent bonus math, and operators have moved toward lower headline matches with no cashout cap rather than larger headline matches with an aggressive cap.

So the trade in NL is real but less visible: you usually get a smaller bonus and full upside on it, instead of a bigger bonus with a hidden ceiling. Always verify on the casino detail page before depositing.

On every BonusWijs casino detail page the cashout cap, where it exists, is listed alongside the wagering and the qualifying inzet, so you can see the real ceiling on a bonus before you deposit. If the page on the operator side buries that number, that is the answer.

Keep reading