Cashback offers
how they work
Returns a share of losses — genuinely useful when the cashback has no wagering.
Cashback returns a percentage of your net losses over a period. It’s one of the more honest bonus types because it’s tied to real money you’ve already spent.
The key question is whether the cashback itself carries wagering. Wager-free cashback is close to real money back; cashback with a playthrough is worth much less.
Read for the percentage, the loss period, any cap, and — most importantly — whether the returned amount is withdrawable or must be wagered.
10% cashback on a $200 loss returns $20. If it’s wager-free, that’s $20 cash. With 20× wagering, you’d bet $400 before withdrawing it — cutting its real value sharply.
Under AGLC rules we don’t list operator offers — the live details always live on each casino’s own site. For the full toolkit, read how to use a casino bonus and wagering requirements explained.