Last updated: 05-06-2026
Most withdrawal complaints at a UK casino come down to one thing — verification timing. At Pub Casino the money you ask to withdraw doesn't move until your identity check clears, and that check is usually triggered the first time you request a payout rather than at sign-up. Two facts shape the experience for players in England. First, this is a debit-card operation — credit card gambling is banned across Great Britain, so the funding options are narrower than you might expect. Second, withdrawal times run from roughly an hour to two days depending on the method. This page sets out the methods on offer, the realistic timings, what the verification step asks for, and how the limits stack up against rivals. No promises here — just the figures, and a note on where each one comes from.
What payment methods does Pub Casino accept?
Two categories are confirmed: debit cards and e-wallets. Credit cards are not an option — and that isn't a Pub Casino quirk. The UK Gambling Commission banned credit card gambling across Great Britain, so no UKGC-licensed site can take them. England sits under that same ruling. To be straight with you about sourcing: only debit cards and e-wallets appear on the brand's own materials. The rest of the list below reflects typical UK provision and figures pulled from competitor pages, and I've flagged that in the table.
In practice, here is what a player in England is working with:
- Debit cards (Visa and Mastercard debit) — the default, eligible for promotions, deposits land instantly.
- E-wallets such as PayPal — quick for withdrawals, but frequently excluded from the welcome offer.
- Apple Pay — routed through a linked debit card, instant on deposit.
- Pay by bank / bank transfer — slower, but useful for larger sums.
- Paysafecard — a voucher for deposits only. You cannot withdraw back to it.
The e-wallet exclusion is the one that catches people out. Fund with PayPal and on most UK sites the bonus quietly never applies — and there's no undo once the deposit is in.
| Method | Type | Min deposit | Min withdrawal | Withdrawal time | Bonus | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Debit card (Visa / Mastercard) | Card | £10 | £10 | 1–2 days | Yes | Debit only; credit cards banned by UKGC. Limits [fallback data] |
| PayPal | E-wallet | £5 | £10 | 1–24 hours | Often excluded | E-wallets confirmed; £5/£20,000 figures sourced from competitor data |
| Apple Pay | E-wallet | £10 | n/a | Deposits only | Yes | Linked to a debit card; instant deposit [fallback data] |
| Pay by bank / transfer | Bank | £10 | £10 | 1–2 days | Yes | Faster Payments where supported [fallback data] |
| Paysafecard | Voucher | £10 | n/a | Deposits only | Yes | Cannot withdraw to a voucher [fallback data] |
How long do withdrawals take at Pub Casino?
The honest range is one hour to two days, and the method you pick decides where you land in that window. E-wallets sit at the fast end. Card and bank withdrawals sit at the slow end — the request leaves Pub Casino quickly, then the banking rails add their own delay. Three things push you towards the two-day mark: an incomplete verification file, a method that takes longer to settle, and a request made over a weekend when manual review teams run lighter. The figures below are positioned within the stated one-hour-to-two-day range.
Author's tip from Benjamin Clarke, Online Casino Content Manager: "Request a small test withdrawal of £10–20 the day you sign up. It forces the verification check early, so when a real payout matters the account is already cleared and the money moves on the method's normal timing — not on top of a 24–72 hour ID review."
KYC verification — what documents do you need?
KYC stands for Know Your Customer, and at a UKGC site it isn't optional. Pub Casino requires it before withdrawals, and the request usually lands the first time you try to take money out. You'll need two things: proof of identity and proof of address. For identity, a passport or a photocard driving licence. For address, a utility bill or bank statement, typically dated within the last three months. Submit clear, uncropped images. The review itself runs 24–72 hours in normal conditions; a blurry document or a name that doesn't match your account is what turns that into a week. Until the check passes, withdrawals stay locked — the funds are still yours, they just can't leave.
Deposit and withdrawal limits — minimums and maximums
Per-method limits aren't published on Pub Casino's own materials, so the figures below are typical UK provision marked as fallback, with PayPal's range taken from a competitor that surfaces it. Treat them as a guide, not a guarantee — confirm in the cashier before you commit to a large transaction. If a payment stalls or is declined, the usual causes are an unverified account, a card registered to a different name, or a daily limit you've already hit. Don't resubmit repeatedly; that can flag the transaction. Contact support with the timestamp and the method instead.
| Method | Min deposit | Max deposit | Min withdrawal | Max withdrawal | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Debit card | £10 | £10,000 | £10 | £5,000 | Typical UK range [fallback data] |
| PayPal | £5 | £10,000 | £10 | £20,000 | sourced from competitor data |
| Bank transfer | £10 | £20,000 | £20 | £10,000 | Best for larger sums [fallback data] |
| Paysafecard | £10 | £1,000 | n/a | n/a | Deposit only [fallback data] |
Author's tip from Benjamin Clarke, Online Casino Content Manager: "Before your first deposit, check whether your method voids the welcome offer. On most UK sites an e-wallet deposit forfeits the bonus entirely — fund with a debit card if the promotion matters, and keep the e-wallet for the withdrawal."
Local payment methods in England — what works best?
For players in England the strongest options are the ones tied to UK banking rails. Pay by bank running on Faster Payments is the closest thing to instant for a bank-linked method, and it sidesteps card-network delays. PayPal remains the most reliable e-wallet for quick withdrawals if you accept the bonus trade-off. A debit card stays the simplest all-rounder. One method you won't find here is cryptocurrency — UKGC-licensed sites in Great Britain don't deal in it, so there's no Bitcoin withdrawal to weigh up, no exchange-rate swing, and no anonymity angle. That's the regulatory reality, not a limitation specific to this brand. For the meaning of terms like Faster Payments or KYC, the glossary spells them out plainly.
| Method | Available | Speed | Fee | Bonus | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pay by bank (Faster Payments) | Yes | 1–2 days | None | Yes | UK banking rail [fallback data] |
| PayPal | Yes | 1–24 hours | None | Often excluded | E-wallets confirmed; figures sourced from competitor data |
| Debit card | Yes | 1–2 days | None | Yes | Debit only — verified from regulator rules |
| Cryptocurrency | No | n/a | n/a | n/a | Not offered under UKGC licensing |
How does Pub Casino compare to competitors in England?
Against UK rivals the picture is competitive but not standout, and the data is partial — most operators don't publish per-method limits either. Virgin Bet surfaces a £5 PayPal minimum and a £20,000 PayPal withdrawal cap, which gives it an edge on accessibility and e-wallet headroom. Highbet's payment terms are sparser still. The scores below normalise each brand to a 0–100% scale per category, with figures partly drawn from competitor pages and marked accordingly. None of these brands offers crypto, so I've left that axis out rather than show four empty bars.
Stripped back to a single hard number, the minimum deposit tells you which site is easiest to start on with the least money committed.
Author's tip from Benjamin Clarke, Online Casino Content Manager: "Match your withdrawal method to your deposit method wherever you can. Mixed methods are the single most common trigger for a manual review and an extra document request — exactly what turns an otherwise same-day payout into a three-day wait."
One last point that has nothing to do with speed. Set a deposit limit before you fund the account, not after. Pub Casino offers deposit limits, time-outs and self-exclusion through GamStop, and those tools work the same whichever payment method you choose. This is an 18+ service — if betting stops being entertainment, the cool-off and self-exclusion options exist for a reason, and using them is straightforward.
Picking a method is really two decisions: how fast it deposits, and how fast it pays back out. The withdrawal page goes deeper on payout windows and what slows them. The bonus page matters here too — some e-wallets forfeit the welcome offer entirely. If a payment stalls on verification, the login page covers the KYC side, and the slots library is where most deposits end up.

