24–72 hours
€20
3,000+
35x
Independent
2024
Visa
Mastercard
PayPal
Skrill
Bank Transfer
Apple Pay
18+ | T&Cs Apply | BeGambleAware.org
X3Bet is a late-2025 integrated sportsbook and casino operating under a Tobique Gaming Commission licence, advertising 4,000+ games across roughly 35 providers. Verdict: a cautious avoid for UK players until the operator entity is consistently disclosed, responsible-gambling tooling is expanded beyond email-only self-exclusion, and the documented pattern of rejected closure requests is addressed.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Founded | Late 2025 |
| Operator | See Identity Card — disclosed inconsistently |
| Primary Licence | Tobique Gaming Commission (licence 0000109) |
| Casino Guru Safety Index | Not rated (no expert review located on Casino Guru) |
| Trustpilot | Heavily negative sentiment on x3bet13.com (24 reviews, April 2026) |
| Game Count | 4,000+ (some reviewers cite 7,000+; figure varies by source) |
| Game Providers | Approximately 35 named studios |
| Welcome Bonus | 100% up to €600 + 200 Free Spins |
| Minimum Deposit | €10 platform minimum; €20 to activate the welcome bonus |
| Withdrawal Speed (E-Wallets) | Under 24 hours stated; player-reported closer to the full 48-hour window |
| Support | 24/7 live chat, email, help centre — no phone |
| Mobile | Browser only — no dedicated app |
X3Bet sits in a clearly defined risk tier: a newly launched offshore dual-product site running under a small, newer regulator, with an operator identity that differs across affiliates and a Trustpilot footprint that reads worse than most newer offshore entries. Compared to a UK-regulated combined sportsbook and casino like Coral, the regulatory backing, player-fund protection, and dispute-resolution infrastructure are materially weaker on every axis covered in Section 10.
The headline X3Bet welcome offer is a 100% deposit match up to €600 plus 200 free spins on a qualifying first deposit of €20 or more. No bonus code is required — the offer is selected at the cashier during deposit. Worked example on a realistic deposit: a £100 deposit (approximately €115) triggers the 100% match, crediting €115 in bonus funds for a total playable balance of €230. The 35x wagering requirement applies to both deposit and bonus, producing €8,050 of qualifying turnover before any winnings become withdrawable. That is a materially higher wagering obligation than the 10x UKGC wagering cap that took effect in January 2026 for UK-regulated sites — it is 3.5 times the turnover a UK-licensed operator would be permitted to demand.
Two further clauses need careful internalising before any deposit. First, a €5 maximum bet during wagering applies — exceeding this on any single spin while the bonus is active can void winnings. Second, a 6x max cash-out on bonus winnings caps realistic upside: however much is won using bonus funds, only up to six times the bonus credit can be withdrawn. On a €115 bonus that ceiling is approximately €690, regardless of whether the wagered balance reaches higher numbers during play. This structurally limits the welcome offer’s expected-value profile even when wagering is completed. UK-regulated networks across the 888 Casino sister site options apply less restrictive bonus-derived withdrawal caps.
The 200 free spins are split into batches of 20 per day across ten consecutive days, with each daily batch active for just 24 hours before the unclaimed portion expires. Winnings from the spins carry a separate 40x wagering multiplier rather than the 35x applied to the match bonus. The overall bonus must be completed within a 10-day lifetime — shorter than the 14–30 day windows most offshore competitors offer, and a notable constraint for recreational players who cannot play daily. A sports welcome bonus is offered as an alternative: 150% up to €/$200 at 5x wagering with a 30-day completion window and minimum qualifying odds of 2.00 for singles and 1.50 per selection for multiples. Players may only activate one of the two welcome offers — selecting the casino match precludes the sports match and vice versa.
Beyond the welcome offer, X3Bet runs a weekly promotional calendar featuring a Thursday 50% reload up to €300, a weekend 50% reload up to €700 plus 50 free spins, and tiered weekly cashback scaling from 5% to 15% depending on VIP level and deposit volume. A five-tier VIP programme sits behind the cashback, with higher levels advertising boosted withdrawal caps (covered in Section 7), exclusive cashback rates, and a dedicated account manager. A coins-based loyalty shop runs in parallel — points are earned on wagering activity and redeemed for bonus cash or free spins, though the conversion rate is steep: roughly €100 of wagering generates one coin, which is punishing for low-stakes players. Established sites like Bet365 run similar integrated sportsbook-and-casino loyalty structures but with more transparent point-to-value conversion ratios. Ongoing promotional value at X3Bet is real for high-volume regulars and thin for casual players.
The casino library is advertised at 4,000+ games across roughly 35 named game providers, though the precise figure varies by source — some reviewers cite 7,000+ titles while one affiliate lists 12,000. The inconsistency itself is worth noting: a mature catalogue claim that differs by a factor of three across affiliated coverage suggests either inclusive counting methodology (aggregator-delivered titles double-counted) or marketing-variant copy rather than verified numbers. Category coverage spans slots, RNG table games, live dealer content, crash games, virtual sports, and sportsbook integration. Evolution Gaming powers the primary live dealer catalogue, which is a genuine quality positive given Evolution’s category leadership in stream reliability and game-show content. Offshore casinos like Basswin Casino run comparable Evolution-powered live catalogues at a similar tier.
| Provider | Notable Titles | Category Strength |
|---|---|---|
| Evolution Gaming | Crazy Time, Lightning Roulette, Monopoly Live | Live Dealer |
| Pragmatic Play | Sweet Bonanza, Gates of Olympus, Big Bass Bonanza | Slots + Live |
| NetEnt | Starburst, Gonzo’s Quest, Dead or Alive 2 | Classic Slots |
| Play’n GO | Book of Dead, Reactoonz, Fire Joker | Slots |
| Hacksaw Gaming | Chaos Crew, Wanted Dead or a Wild, Le Bandit | High-Volatility Slots |
Slot coverage is the strongest area of the library. Established studios including Microgaming, Playtech, Yggdrasil, Quickspin, Thunderkick, BGaming, Blueprint, Playson, Red Rake, Red Tiger, Relax Gaming, Spinomenal, Wazdan, Booming Games, and Tom Horn Gaming are all listed by third-party affiliates. Megaways titles and modern high-volatility releases from Hacksaw and BTG sit alongside legacy Microgaming and NetEnt classics. Table games cover the standard blackjack, roulette, baccarat and poker variants in both RNG and live formats; live tables are supplied by Evolution alongside Vivo Gaming and Ezugi.
Sports betting is the second product pillar. Coverage includes football, basketball, tennis, hockey, and esports, with live in-play markets that third-party reviewers describe as fast-loading and rarely rejecting. Integrated sportsbook-and-casino sites like Genting Casino offer a similar dual-product structure, though Genting pairs it with UK regulatory oversight that X3Bet does not carry. The overall breadth is genuine, but the library figures should be treated as approximate rather than verified — published counts on the operator’s pages could not be independently checked against a live game audit.
Banking breadth is wide on paper. Third-party reviews list at least 18 supported methods spanning traditional cards (Visa, Mastercard, Maestro), e-wallets (Skrill, Neteller, MuchBetter, Revolut, MiFinity), mobile payment rails (Apple Pay, Google Pay), prepaid options (Paysafecard), open banking (Rapid Transfer, Open Banking), and a broad cryptocurrency spread (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, Dogecoin, USDT, USD Coin). Apple Pay and Google Pay availability is genuinely useful at this tier. PayPal is NOT listed in any verified method roster.
| Method | Min Deposit | Max Deposit | Withdrawal Time (Stated) | Withdrawal Time (Player-Reported) | Fees |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa / Mastercard / Maestro | €10 | Not stated | 1–3 business days | Up to 3 business days | None stated |
| Skrill / Neteller / MuchBetter | €10 | Not stated | Under 24 hours | Close to full 48-hour window | None stated |
| Apple Pay / Google Pay | €10 | Not stated | Deposit only (typical) | N/A | None stated |
| Bitcoin / Ethereum / Litecoin / USDT / USDC | €10 | Not stated | Under 24 hours | Close to full 48-hour window | None stated |
| Bank Transfer | €300 | Not stated | 3–5 business days | 3–5 business days | None stated |
Withdrawal caps are the critical banking data point and are structured by VIP level. Level 1 standard players operate under a €500 per-day and €7,000 per-month ceiling — a materially tight monthly figure that falls below Casino Guru’s own published threshold for penalising restrictive withdrawal limits. Progressing through the five-tier VIP ladder lifts the cap, with the top tier advertising €1,500 per day and €20,000 per month. A standard monthly cap of €16,000 is also referenced across third-party review coverage; these figures vary by VIP level and player segment and should be confirmed in-cashier before planning a withdrawal schedule. A €10,000 win at Level 1 would take close to six weeks to extract, and a €30,000 win would require a full five months at the Level 1 cap.
Pending-review period is typically up to 48 hours before funds are released to the payment rail. Player-reported withdrawal experience routinely hits the full 48-hour window rather than the under-24-hour stated speed, and first withdrawals consistently take longer due to KYC documentation checks. KYC enforcement has been a recurring friction point in third-party reviews — documentation requests that arrive after a win, and repeated requests for additional or different documents, have been specifically flagged. UK sports-and-casino sites like Virgin Bet process KYC in a more predictable pre-withdrawal queue. Best method for UK players is Revolut or an established e-wallet like Skrill for the sub-24-hour stated speed combined with a low €20 withdrawal minimum — bank transfer is impractical at this site for casual players given the €300 minimum withdrawal.
X3Bet does not offer a dedicated iOS or Android app. Mobile access is entirely browser-based through Safari, Chrome, Firefox or Edge on any device. The responsive build is competent: the homepage and game lobby scale cleanly to portrait orientation, casino and sportsbook sections are cleanly separated in navigation, the cashier functions without friction on mobile, and slots load quickly. Live dealer streams from Evolution and Vivo reorient for vertical viewing, though third-party testers have noted some evening load lag on live tables during peak hours.
Mobile game library parity with desktop is essentially complete — the full slot and live roster is available in browser — and the site supports eight languages (English, German, Polish, Italian, French, Spanish, Greek) across navigation. Sportsbook in-play functionality works on mobile with live-bet-slip updates and cash-out controls. The gaps are the standard browser-only ones: no biometric login, no native push notifications for pending withdrawal status or bonus drops, no offline lobby browsing, and no app-specific promotions. For a 2025-launched site building an integrated casino-plus-sportsbook product, the missing app is a notable product gap compared to established competitors — though the responsive browser build itself works acceptably for session-length play once a user accepts the absence of native app conveniences. Our Instaspin casino review covers a similarly browser-based offshore alternative.
Support runs through three channels: 24/7 live chat, email, and a help centre for standard queries. Live chat response times during third-party testing were typically under two minutes, with agents handling standard account and cashier queries competently. Email is the primary route for documentation uploads (including KYC) and longer-form disputes, with typical turnaround inside one working day. A help centre covers common questions on bonuses, payments and verification, though without the documentation depth of established operators. There is no telephone support — a common gap at offshore casinos but a specific limitation for players who prefer verbal escalation of account-level disputes.
English-language support is the default across all three channels, with the website navigation available in eight languages as noted above. However, live chat language coverage outside English is not consistently reported across third-party reviews, so non-English speakers should expect English-only response on chat even when browsing in another language. Operators within the Velobet sister brands network handle broader multilingual support by comparison.
X3Bet operates under a remote gaming licence issued by the Tobique Gaming Commission — licence number 0000109 per affiliated coverage. The Tobique Gaming Commission is a regulator established by the Wolastoqey First Nation in New Brunswick, Canada. It is a genuine licensing authority with published regulatory requirements, and the licence is verifiable on the Tobique register per one independent reviewer’s check. However, Tobique is a smaller, newer jurisdiction with materially less enforcement infrastructure than the MGA, UKGC, or Isle of Man regulators. Dispute resolution sits under Tobique jurisdiction, player-fund segregation is not mandated to the standard UK players are accustomed to, and the regulator’s track record on player complaint escalation is limited by its recent establishment.
The operator entity disclosure is the more serious concern. Different third-party sources cite different legal entities: AboutSlots describes “Costa Rica-registered 3-102-945295 S.R.L.”, while other affiliated reviews and an official-looking SEO landing page describe “Mediona LTD” registered in Limassol, Cyprus. One independent reviewer (casinos.cc) has documented that “the platform does not publicly display licensing or company information” on its main pages. For a regulated casino, the registered operator name should be visible in the footer and consistent across all sources — it is not here. Until the operator resolves this disclosure inconsistency on its own pages, UK players have no single verifiable point of reference for who they are contracting with.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Primary Licence | Tobique Gaming Commission (licence 0000109) |
| Secondary Licence | None |
| Licence Holder | Inconsistently disclosed — see section above |
| Player Fund Protection | Not publicly stated |
| Self-Exclusion | Operator-level self-exclusion via email request only; no in-account deposit, loss, or session limits per independent testing |
| ADR Provider | Not publicly stated |
| RNG Testing | Game providers carry independent certifications at source; operator-level RNG testing partner not publicly named |
Responsible gambling tooling is the most concerning area covered in this review. Two independent reviewers (BonusManiac and Online.Casino) have separately documented that X3Bet’s responsible-gambling provision is limited to self-exclusion requested via email — with no in-account deposit limits, no loss limits, no session timers, no reality-check notifications, and no cooling-off functionality available as self-service tools. This is a materially weaker toolkit than competitors at a comparable tier offer, and is well below what a UK player accustomed to UKGC-regulated sites like Jackpotjoy would expect. Separately, verified Trustpilot reviews on the current x3bet13.com domain include player accounts reporting that self-exclusion requests were initially rejected and accounts were allowed to continue depositing — if accurate, this is a serious operational failure regardless of the written policy.
On security, SSL encryption is in place for page transmission. The game catalogue runs on certified code from licensed B2B suppliers whose individual titles are independently tested at source. The operator-level RNG testing partner is not publicly named. Anyone experiencing gambling harm in the UK can contact GambleAware at gambleaware.org or GamCare at gamcare.org.uk for free confidential support, regardless of which site prompted the concern. Given the documented gap in X3Bet’s own responsible-gambling toolkit, UK players using third-party device-level blocking applications alongside any deposit activity here is a sensible precaution rather than an optional extra.
The player-feedback picture is materially negative, and the underlying pattern deserves specific attention. Trustpilot carries a review footprint on the x3bet13.com domain — the current numbered iteration of the brand — with 24 reviews as of April 2026 and sentiment tilted heavily to one-star ratings. Paraphrasing two specific reviews for illustration: one player reports depositing €200, winning over €1,400, being upgraded to VIP Level 2 with a personal manager, and then being told post-win that withdrawal was capped at €100 per day and any single bet over €5 would be disallowed — effectively trapping the winnings. Another UK player named Christopher Hall documents multiple self-exclusion requests being rejected, with the casino continuing to accept deposits after closure had been requested, and asks for a refund of funds deposited after the closure request. Established operators like Gala Spins maintain clearer complaint resolution records for comparison.
A further pattern emerges from the Trustpilot set: one reviewer describes the brand as operating a domain-rotation pattern with numbered iterations (x3bet1, x3bet2, continuing through x3bet13, x3bet17 and beyond), alleging new domains launch as older ones draw negative attention. This allegation is on-record from a verified reviewer rather than an editorial claim — readers can verify the Trustpilot footprint themselves — but the existence of multiple numbered variant domains is itself a signal worth internalising. Separate reviews describe unsolicited SMS marketing messages offering deposit bonuses and free spins being sent without recorded consent, which would be a UK consumer-protection concern if the recipients did not opt in at registration.
| Source | What Players Praise | What Players Criticise |
|---|---|---|
| Trustpilot (x3bet13.com, 24 reviews, April 2026) | Fast payout on a verified first withdrawal (isolated positive account) | Self-exclusion requests rejected; VIP upgrade followed by bet and withdrawal restrictions post-win; spam SMS marketing; KYC goalpost-shifting |
| Reddit (/r/UKCasinos) | Limited discussion volume | Limited discussion volume |
| Casino Guru | Not currently listed with an expert Safety Index | Not currently listed with an expert Safety Index |
| AskGamblers | Not substantively listed | Not substantively listed |
The dominant theme across verifiable sources is withdrawal friction escalating after a win, combined with responsible-gambling failures. Casino Guru has not published an expert Safety Index for this operator at time of research, so there is no black-point total or complaint count to cite from that source. Casinomeister has not issued a public rogue classification. Established UK-regulated combined sport-and-casino sites like Unibet attract complaint patterns of a different character — typically affordability-check friction or specific market disputes — rather than the self-exclusion-rejection and post-win-restriction pattern visible here. The absence of a Casino Guru safety rating should not be read as a neutral signal; it means the operator’s conduct has not been subjected to the same independent review framework applied to casinos at higher trust tiers.
The responsible gambling provision is the most serious concrete gap. Self-exclusion via email only, with no in-account deposit, loss, session or cooling-off limits, is materially below the minimum toolkit a player should expect from any modern casino. The Trustpilot accounts describing self-exclusion requests being rejected — if representative — compound this into an active operational concern rather than a passive documentation gap.
Operator identity disclosure is the second material concern. A regulated casino should display the registered operator and licence holder in a single canonical location accessible from every page, and those details should match across affiliated coverage. Here they do not. Until the operator publishes a consistent entity disclosure across its own pages, UK players have no verifiable counterparty for a dispute.
The welcome-bonus economics work against realistic profit extraction. The combined effect of 35x wagering on deposit+bonus, 40x on free-spin winnings, 10-day lifetime, €5 maximum bet during wagering, and 6x maximum cash-out on bonus winnings is a structurally capped expected value — even when the wagering is successfully completed. Free-spin batches of 20 per day with 24-hour window constraints force daily logins to extract full bonus value.
VIP-tiered withdrawal caps starting at €500 per day and €7,000 per month at Level 1 are tight by any comparison. A €10,000 win at Level 1 takes close to six weeks to extract. The €300 minimum bank-transfer withdrawal rules out a mainstream payment method for casual players. Player-reported withdrawal speeds routinely hit the full 48-hour internal review window rather than the stated sub-24-hour figure.
Further operational and product gaps include: no phone support, no dedicated mobile casino app, no independent ADR provider named publicly, no RNG testing partner named at operator level, no player-fund segregation statement, no live chat confirmed in multiple languages despite multilingual site navigation, and no published complaint-resolution SLA. KYC documentation requests have been described by multiple reviewers as escalating after a win rather than being resolved pre-deposit.
X3Bet has the surface attributes of a competent modern offshore site: a clean Corestar-powered lobby, genuine game breadth with Evolution live content in the mix, 18+ payment methods including crypto and mobile payment rails, and a 24/7 live chat that responds within industry-standard timeframes. An integrated sportsbook-and-casino product under one account is genuinely useful, and the Tobique Gaming Commission licence is a verifiable regulatory backstop rather than an absent one.
The countervailing weight is substantial and sits in three areas a player-first review cannot gloss over. First, the responsible-gambling toolkit is limited to email-requested self-exclusion with no in-account limits or reality checks, which is below a defensible minimum in 2026. Second, the documented Trustpilot pattern of self-exclusion rejections, post-win betting and withdrawal restrictions, and VIP-upgrade-followed-by-cap manipulations is coherent across multiple independent reports — and the same Trustpilot set documents a rotating-domain pattern (x3bet1 through x3bet17+) that is unusual for a single-licence operator. Third, the registered operator entity is disclosed inconsistently across coverage, with no single canonical disclosure on the operator’s own pages verifying who the player is contracting with.
For whom does this make sense? There is no UK-player segment for which the current configuration of X3Bet is a better choice than a UKGC-licensed competitor. Experienced offshore players who understand Tobique-jurisdiction limitations, who will deposit only amounts they can accept losing entirely, who do not need functioning self-exclusion, and who will not need escalated dispute resolution may find the product adequate for short recreational sessions. For every other UK player, a UKGC-licensed alternative is the appropriate choice on responsible-gambling grounds alone. If a reader has already deposited here and is trying to withdraw: complete KYC verification through live chat before initiating the withdrawal, document all communication in writing, and if responsible-gambling requests are rejected, save the evidence and escalate via the Tobique Gaming Commission complaints process.
James has spent over a decade in the gambling industry, starting as a croupier before transitioning to casino analysis. He oversees all TrustCasino reviews and ensures our editorial standards remain uncompromising. His expertise in licensing and regulatory compliance helps us identify trustworthy operators.