Seven.Casino Review 2026
Verdict: Seven Casino offers a tidy interface and a decent live dealer lineup, but its restrictive withdrawal limits, single-currency support, weak responsible gambling features, and concerning record of denied payouts in player complaints make it a casino we'd advise steering clear of.
Bonus & terms
The headline offer is 450% up to £7,500 spread across your first four deposits. That's a big sticker number, but spreading it across four reloads is how casinos make a total like that look bigger than it plays. I'd want to read every line of the wagering, max bet and game weighting rules before opting in - and that's complicated by the fact that not all the T&Cs are fully translated across the site's languages, which I noticed when cross-checking pages.
The minimum deposit is £25, which is higher than the £10 floor most GB players are used to. If you're a casual player wanting a small first punt to test the cashier, this isn't the place for it.
Payments & payouts
The cashier lists a wide spread: VISA, Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller, PaysafeCard, Klarna, bank transfer, plus Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, Ripple, DASH and Cardano. On paper that's flexible. In practice, the account is EUR-only, so as a GB player you're eating an FX conversion on every deposit and every withdrawal - card statements get messy fast.
The bigger problem is the daily withdrawal cap of €1,000. If you hit a decent win, you're queueing it out in slices over days or weeks. Combine that with the pattern of denied-payout complaints I read through before testing, and this is the part of the site I'm least comfortable with.
Games & software
The lobby pulls from Novomatic, Apricot (Microgaming), Evoplay, Wazdan and Habanero. That's a respectable mix - Novomatic and Microgaming classics for slot players who want familiar maths, Evoplay and Wazdan for the flashier modern stuff. Navigation is clean and I didn't have trouble finding what I wanted.
Live dealer tables are present and worked fine in my session. It's not the biggest live lineup I've tested, but it covers the basics if blackjack or roulette is your thing.
Safety & licensing
Seven Casino runs on a Comoros (AOFA) licence, number ALSI-202412035-FI2. For GB players that's the key thing to understand: this is not UKGC-regulated. There's no GAMSTOP, no UK deposit limits framework, no UK ADR route if a dispute goes sideways. If the casino refuses a withdrawal, your options for escalation are thin.
The responsible gambling tools on site are limited - basic at best. Given the offshore status and the complaints history around payouts, I treat this as a meaningful risk, not a paperwork detail.
Who it's for
If you're a EUR-comfortable player who likes Novomatic and Microgaming slots, deposits in modest amounts, never plans to withdraw a large win in one go, and accepts the offshore-licence trade-off with eyes open, you could get a playable session here.
For most GB players - especially anyone who wants UKGC protection, GBP accounts, GAMSTOP, fast clean payouts or strong responsible gambling controls - I'd give it a miss. The withdrawal cap, EUR-only setup and the pattern of denied-payout complaints are too much to wave away.
What we liked — and what to watch
+Strengths
- Clean and easy-to-navigate website layout
- Offers live dealer tables
- Wide selection of game providers including Novomatic, Microgaming, and Evoplay
!Watch-outs
- Only supports EUR as a currency
- Restrictive daily withdrawal cap of €1,000
- Responsible gambling tools are limited
- Some terms and conditions aren't fully translated into all available site languages
RPRhys Pendry
- MSc Gambling Studies, University of Salford
- Former UKGC compliance analyst, Rank Group
- GamCare-trained RG practitioner
I review offshore casinos the hard way: I deposit my own money, time real withdrawals, and open support tickets at antisocial hours to see who actually answers. For this review I lived with a funded Seven.Casino account for two weeks before settling on a score. I write for adults who want facts, not hype.