Deposits are usually credited quickly, but the method list is not fixed in the same way for every account. What appears in the cashier depends on country context, payment direction, and the account setup you are using at that moment.
The public funding floor starts at EUR 10, but that number should not be mixed with reward thresholds. A deposit can be high enough to fund the account and still be too low for a welcome stage or a weekly reload offer.
If the balance does not update right away, the first response is short and practical: wait a few minutes, sign in again, and then move to transaction-specific checks. That usually gives a clearer answer than treating every slow balance update as a failed payment.
The confirmed public short list covers cards, wallets, prepaid options, and crypto. Visa, Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller, Paysafecard, and several crypto routes are part of the visible deposit picture, while broader public references also mention options such as MiFinity, Revolut, Wise, and Interac.
The useful distinction is between what is publicly supported and what is live in your own cashier. A method can belong to the product and still not appear for every country, currency, or account context.
| Method Family | Confirmed Public Signal | What to Verify Live |
|---|---|---|
| Cards | Visa and Mastercard are publicly named | Check whether the route is visible in your current cashier |
| Wallets | Skrill and Neteller are publicly named | Check whether the wallet appears for your account region and currency |
| Prepaid | Paysafecard is publicly named | Check whether it is available for deposit in your current setup |
| Crypto | Several popular crypto routes are publicly supported | Check which crypto options are currently shown in the payment area |
| Extended Routes | Crosschecked public lists also mention MiFinity, Revolut, Wise, and Interac | Use the live cashier as the final check instead of assuming the broader list always applies |
The table is useful for orientation, but the live cashier still has the last word. Public method visibility tells you which families exist, while the payment area tells you what can actually be used on the account in front of you.
The minimum deposit at Spinzen Casino starts at EUR 10, but that is only the general funding floor. Public offer thresholds sit higher, so the amount that opens the account balance is not always the amount that qualifies for a reward.
Crosschecked public reward thresholds place the first four welcome stages at EUR 50, while the weekly reload threshold starts at EUR 20. That means a deposit can be valid as a payment and still miss the threshold for the offer you expected.
Once the payment is accepted, the normal expectation is quick balance credit. In practice, that means the method was visible in the cashier, the payment went through in the current account context, and the balance reflects the change without a long wait.
The next checks belong to the account, not to guesswork. Look at the balance, confirm that the method was shown in your current payment area, and keep in mind that supported fiat contexts can differ across markets, including EUR, CAD, CHF, DKK, HUF, NOK, NZD, and PLN in broader public coverage.
A slow balance update is not automatically a failed deposit. The first confirmed checks are to wait a few minutes and sign in again before treating the payment as a support case.
The shortest route is also the most useful one at the start. Give the system a little time, then reload the session and check the balance again before escalating.
A missing route does not always mean it was removed from the product. Country context, currency setup, and payment direction can all change what appears in the current cashier view.
The payment can be valid and still fall short of the reward threshold you had in mind. This usually happens when the site funding floor is confused with a welcome-stage or reload requirement.
A good support case is specific, not just urgent. Support is more likely to act quickly when the payment details are clear and the first local checks are already done.
Once the first checks no longer explain the missing balance, the support page is the right next stop with your screenshots and timing ready.
The public list is broad, but the live cashier is narrower by design. Country rules, payment direction, and currency context can all change whether a method appears, even when that method is part of the wider product picture.
This is why one player can see a method that another player cannot use at the same moment. If the main question is which route fits your country, currency, or payout plan best, compare the live-facing payment methods next.
A working deposit does not remove later account checks. Withdrawals still depend on verification, and some payment routes may not behave the same way in both directions even when the initial funding step worked without friction.
That makes the deposit choice matter beyond the first payment. When the deposit question turns into a payout question, the page on payout timing covers the next stage without mixing the two jobs.
If the deposit itself worked but later account checks become the real blocker, the page on account verification explains that path in more detail.
The usual flow is simple: choose a route that is visible in the cashier, complete the payment, and check whether the balance updates. Public guidance says deposits are usually credited quickly, but live method availability still depends on country and account context.
Visa and Mastercard are part of the publicly confirmed deposit list. The practical check is whether the card route appears in your current cashier.
Yes. Skrill is part of the publicly confirmed deposit picture, although actual visibility still depends on the current account context and market setup.
Yes. Neteller is publicly named among the supported deposit methods, but the live cashier remains the final check for your own account.
Yes. Paysafecard is publicly named in the payment layer, and its live availability should be checked in the current cashier view.
Yes. Several popular crypto routes are publicly supported, but the exact options shown can vary by account and payment context.
Deposits are usually credited quickly. In practice, that means balance update is expected soon after payment, although the first response to a short delay is still to wait a few minutes and sign in again.
A delayed balance update is not automatically a failed payment. The first confirmed checks are to wait a few minutes, sign in again, and confirm that the payment route was visible in the cashier when the deposit was made.
Yes. Public guidance explicitly supports signing in again as one of the first checks when a deposit has not yet reached the balance.