GuidePaymentsNZ

Online Casino Payment Methods NZ 2026 — Complete Comparison

Editor
Ben CarterEditor
schedule Updated 12 June 2026

Every NZ-friendly payment option for online casinos compared. Paysafecard, Visa/Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller, crypto, bank transfer, MiFinity — and the latest on POLi's declining bank support.

The NZ Casino Payments Landscape in 2026

The payment options available to Kiwi casino players have shifted significantly over the past 24 months. POLi — once the default NZ bank transfer method — has lost most of its bank-side support after ANZ, BNZ and Westpac tightened policies on third-party services that access online banking credentials. Paysafecard has filled much of the gap as a prepaid alternative. Crypto has grown from a niche option to a mainstream method, particularly for serious players. And from 1 December 2026, the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 bans credit card deposits at NZ-licensed operators — debit cards remain permitted.

Payment Methods Compared

MethodDeposit speedWithdrawal speedNZ availabilityBest for
PaysafecardInstantNot available (deposit only)4,000+ NZ retail outletsPrivacy, no bank exposure
Visa debitInstant1–3 business daysUniversalFamiliarity, refund pathway
Mastercard debitInstant1–3 business daysUniversalFamiliarity, refund pathway
Bank transfer1–3 business days1–3 business daysUniversalLarge amounts, no fees
POLiInstant when working2–5 daysDeclining — most NZ banks pulled supportLimited use cases in 2026
SkrillInstant2–24 hoursStrongE-wallet users
NetellerInstant2–24 hoursStrongE-wallet users
MiFinityInstant2–12 hoursGrowingNZD-supportive e-wallet
Jeton CashInstantNot availableAvailable via voucherPrepaid alternative
Bitcoin (BTC)10–30 min10 min – 4 hoursUniversal (Easy Crypto)Speed, low fees
Ethereum (ETH)2–10 min5 min – 2 hoursUniversalDeFi users
USDT (Tether)2–10 min5 min – 2 hoursUniversalStablecoin, lowest fees on TRC-20
Litecoin (LTC)2–10 min5 min – 1 hourUniversalFast, ultra-low fees

Paysafecard — The New Default for NZ Players

Paysafecard is a prepaid 16-digit voucher you buy at retail outlets across NZ. The deposit flow:

  1. Buy a voucher at BP, Z Energy, Mobil, dairies, pharmacies, or selected supermarkets. Denominations: NZ$10, NZ$20, NZ$50, NZ$100, NZ$250, NZ$500.
  2. The voucher prints with a 16-digit PIN.
  3. At the casino cashier, select Paysafecard, enter the PIN, your deposit credits instantly.
  4. The voucher is now "spent" — you can't use the same PIN twice.

The advantages: no bank account exposure, no card details, no e-wallet account, no chargeback risk. The disadvantage: you can't withdraw to a Paysafecard. You'll need a second method for cashouts (bank transfer or e-wallet typically).

Bank Transfer & the POLi Situation

POLi (Payments Online) was a direct-from-bank-account transfer service. You'd select POLi at the casino cashier, get redirected to your bank's online banking, log in, and authorise the payment. No card, no e-wallet required.

In 2024–2025, ANZ, BNZ and Westpac progressively tightened their policies on third-party services that access online banking credentials. As a result POLi works at fewer NZ casinos in 2026 and deposits frequently fail even where it's listed. Kiwibank and ASB still support POLi in some cases but reliability is patchy.

Direct bank transfer (sending NZD to the casino's bank account from your online banking) still works at most operators but takes 1–3 business days each direction. Worth knowing for larger deposits where speed isn't critical and you want zero fees.

See our NZ bank deposits guide for the bank-by-bank breakdown.

E-Wallets — Skrill, Neteller, MiFinity

E-wallets sit between your bank account and the casino. You fund the e-wallet from your NZ bank (or via card), then use the e-wallet to deposit at casinos. The casino sees the e-wallet's payment, not your bank account directly.

Skrill and Neteller are owned by the same parent (Paysafe) and operate similarly. MiFinity is newer and has been actively courting the NZ market with NZD-native wallet support. All three offer instant deposits and 2–24 hour withdrawals.

E-wallet fees are a consideration. Skrill and Neteller typically charge 1% to fund the wallet from a card and 0% for bank deposits. Internal e-wallet-to-casino transfers are usually free. Withdrawal back to bank from the e-wallet costs NZ$5–NZ$10 depending on amount.

Crypto — The Power-User Option

Crypto has gone from niche to mainstream for Kiwi casino players over the past two years. The four main reasons: speed (fastest withdrawals in the market), reliability (no NZ-bank policy restrictions), low fees (often zero platform fees, sub-NZ$2 network fees), and privacy on-platform.

The four primary cryptocurrencies for casino play: Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Tether (USDT) and Litecoin (LTC). USDT on the TRC-20 network is the option we recommend most often for serious players — sub-NZ$1 network fees, sub-1-minute confirmations, USD-pegged so no exposure to price volatility between deposit and withdrawal.

For NZ on-ramps, use Easy Crypto (easycrypto.com) or Independent Reserve (independentreserve.com). Both are NZ-licensed and KYC-compliant. See our crypto casinos NZ guide for setup walkthrough.

Card Payments — Debit vs Credit

NZ-issued Visa and Mastercard debit cards work at most casinos. Deposits are instant. Withdrawals are returned as refunds to the card and take 1–3 business days.

Credit card deposits are technically possible at offshore casinos today, but two factors limit usage: (1) NZ-issuing banks (especially ANZ, BNZ, ASB) increasingly block gambling-coded credit card transactions; (2) from 1 December 2026, NZ-licensed casinos under the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 will not accept credit card deposits as a matter of law. Debit cards remain permitted.

FX & NZD Wallet

Every casino in our top 15 supports a native NZD wallet — your deposits credit in NZD without forced FX conversion. If you ever land at a casino that only offers USD or EUR wallets, expect to lose 1.5%–2.5% per FX leg (deposit and withdrawal). Avoid.

One quirk to watch: even at NZD-native casinos, some payment methods may route via USD intermediary processors. The casino-side balance stays in NZD but your card statement may show a USD transaction with a small FX charge from your bank. Check your card statement after first deposit; if there's a notable FX charge, switch to a different payment method.

Deposit Speed vs Withdrawal Speed — Why They Differ

Deposits process instantly because the casino bears no risk in accepting money. Withdrawals take longer because the casino:

  1. Verifies KYC documents (first-time withdrawals only)
  2. Validates that the wagering on any bonus is cleared
  3. Routes the payment through their banking/crypto stack
  4. Waits for the receiving network's settlement time

Crypto sidesteps step 4 (network confirmation only). E-wallet withdrawals are fast because there's no settlement lag — internal transfer. Card refunds and bank transfers add the settlement lag.

Deposit & Withdrawal Limits

Typical limits at NZ-friendly casinos:

  • Minimum deposit: NZ$10–NZ$20 at most operators; NZ$5 at Rolling Slots; NZ$1 at Spinlander (trial)
  • Maximum deposit per transaction: NZ$5,000–NZ$10,000 depending on method
  • Minimum withdrawal: NZ$20–NZ$50 typically
  • Maximum daily withdrawal: NZ$2,000–NZ$9,800 depending on operator and VIP tier

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