A Trust Score is only useful if you know what sits behind it. Here is exactly how we test, read and check every casino before we publish a number, and why that number cannot be bought.
- Every score is built from five weighted factors, not a single gut feeling.
- We test real withdrawals with our own money before publishing.
- Commission and advertising never move a score up or down.
- The community rating is collected separately from our editorial score.
The Problem With Most Casino Ratings
The core issue with the average casino rating is that it rewards the wrong things. A flashy welcome offer is easy to advertise and easy to score highly, yet it tells you almost nothing about whether you will actually be paid when you win. A modern interface looks reassuring, but plenty of well-designed casinos have terrible payout records hiding behind them.
Worse still, many review sites are paid per sign-up, which creates an obvious temptation to rank the highest bidder at the top. We are an affiliate site too, and we are honest about that. The difference is structural: our scores are produced by analysts who do not see commercial terms, and no commercial relationship can change a published number. If a casino that pays us well performs badly in testing, it scores badly. That is the only way a rating is worth reading.
The Five Factors Behind Every Score
A Trust Score is a weighted blend of five factors. Each one is assessed on its own, given a sub-score, and then combined. Splitting the work this way keeps the process consistent and means we can show you exactly where a casino gained or lost points.
1. Terms Fairness
We read the full bonus and account terms and grade them against the practices we see across the industry. We are looking for predatory clauses: unusually high wagering requirements, tiny maximum bets while a bonus is active, aggressive dormancy fees, or vague language that lets a casino refuse a withdrawal on a technicality. Clear, reasonable terms score well even when they are strict.
2. Casino Size and Financial Strength
A casino can only pay a large win if it has the funds to cover it. We estimate each operator’s size using available revenue data and traffic signals, because a bigger, established operator is far less likely to stall on a five-figure payout than a tiny brand running on thin margins.
3. Player Complaints
We track complaints across public databases and forums, then look past the raw number. A large casino will naturally attract more complaints simply because it has more players. What matters is the rate relative to traffic and, more importantly, how those complaints were resolved.
4. Blacklist and License Status
We check whether the casino appears on any monitored industry blacklist and confirm its license is active with the stated regulator. A genuine license from a respected authority is a real protection, since it gives you somewhere to escalate a dispute.
5. Payout Reliability
This is the factor that matters most to players and the one most review sites skip, because it takes real effort. We do not take a casino’s word on payout speed. We test it.
We Test Withdrawals With Our Own Money
Before a casino is scored, an analyst opens a real account, completes verification the way any player would, deposits, plays, and then requests a withdrawal. We record how long each stage takes, whether the verification process is reasonable, and whether the funds arrive within the timeframe the casino advertises.
We repeat this across the main payment rails, because the experience can vary enormously. Crypto and e-wallet withdrawals are usually fast, while card and bank transfers tend to lag. A casino that pays an e-wallet cashout in two hours but holds a card withdrawal for a week is described exactly that way in the review, rather than averaged into a single misleading figure.
If a casino cannot pay a modest, fully verified withdrawal on time during our own testing, no welcome bonus in the world can rescue its score.
We Read The Terms So You Do Not Have To
Terms and conditions are where casinos hide the clauses that matter, and almost nobody reads them. We do, on every single review. Our analysts work through the bonus terms, the general account terms, and the responsible-gambling policy, flagging anything a player would want to know before depositing.
Some of the things we routinely surface include:
- The real wagering requirement, and how it compares to the market average.
- Maximum bet limits that apply while a bonus is active.
- Whether there is a cap on winnings from a deposit bonus.
- Dormancy or inactivity fees and when they begin.
- Any country or game restrictions that could void a bonus.
We translate each finding into plain language and mark it as either fair or a concern, so you can scan the assessment in seconds rather than wading through legal text yourself.
How We Weigh Player Complaints
Complaints are noisy data. Some are genuine, some are players who did not complete verification, and some are simply frustration with a fair rule. Our job is to separate signal from noise. We read through the history, group complaints by cause, and pay closest attention to patterns rather than one-off incidents.
A single unresolved complaint about a delayed payout is worth investigating. Ten resolved complaints about slow verification during a busy promotion tell a different and far less alarming story. We weight unresolved, payout-related complaints most heavily, because those are the ones that can cost you money.
Why The Community Score Stays Separate
You will notice two numbers on many of our reviews: our editorial Trust Score, and a separate community rating gathered from readers. We keep these apart on purpose. Reader ratings are valuable for capturing the everyday experience of using a casino, but they can be skewed by a handful of very good or very bad days, and occasionally by operators trying to inflate their own score.
By keeping the community rating independent, we let you see both perspectives without one quietly distorting the other. Our editorial score reflects structured testing; the community score reflects lived experience. Read together, they give a fuller picture than either could alone.
How Often We Update A Review
Casinos change. Owners sell up, terms get rewritten, and a brand with a spotless record can slide after a change of management. A review that is accurate today can mislead a year from now, so every review carries a visible last-updated date and is revisited on a regular cycle.
We also re-test sooner when something prompts it: a spike in complaints, a change of license, a major shift in the terms, or reader reports of payout trouble. When a score moves, we say why. Transparency about changes is part of the same promise as transparency about the method itself.
That is the whole process, start to finish. The next time you see a Trust Score on The Casino Feed, you will know it represents real testing, a careful read of the terms, and a complaint record we have actually examined, rather than a number designed to sell you something. That is the standard we hold ourselves to on every review we publish.
Jordan has spent six years testing online casinos, with a focus on payout reliability and bonus terms. At The Casino Feed he leads the review methodology and runs the withdrawal-testing programme.