Wagering multipliers on free-spin winnings are the single most misread number in any casino bonus. This page turns them into NZD-denominated worked examples so the impact on your real balance is impossible to miss.
Wagering — sometimes written as "rollover" or "playthrough" — is the total amount you must bet before any bonus-denominated balance becomes withdrawable. It is expressed as a multiple of something: either the bonus amount or the winnings from the bonus. Free-spin bonuses almost always multiply the winnings, not the spin value itself, which is a meaningful distinction.
Example: you receive 50 free spins on Blazing Bison at 7Bit. The 50 spins win $20 in total. The 45× wagering applies to that $20, giving a required rollover of $20 × 45 = $900 of wagered play before the $20 (minus any losses during the rollover) can be withdrawn.
If the spins had won $2 instead, the rollover would be $90 — much more achievable. If they had won $200, the rollover would be $9,000 — which is where the real difficulty appears.
The lowest wagering available in the NZ $1 free-spins market. A $20 win from 50 Blazing Bison spins requires $900 of wagered play to clear. On a 96.5%-RTP pokie, you should expect to lose roughly $31 during that $900 of play ($900 × 3.5% house edge), leaving you short of the $20. In practice, the distribution is not linear and some players clear with the full $20 plus a few dollars extra; others run out of bonus funds partway through.
Kiwi's Treasure runs at the 60× bracket, a one-third step up from 7Bit. The same $20 win now requires $1,200 of wagered play, and the expected loss during that play rises to $42. The probability of walking away with withdrawable funds is meaningfully lower than at 45×, although the frictionless-claim upside (no bonus code) compensates for some players.
The Casino Rewards and Bayton/Microgaming brands apply 200× on winnings. But — and this is the trick most bonus-comparison sites get wrong — the 200× only activates if you actually win from the chance-tickets. On a losing 80-chance Zodiac session (which is the most likely outcome), there is zero rollover because there is zero bonus-denominated balance to roll over.
If you do win, say $50 from a Mega Money Wheel hit, the rollover becomes $50 × 200 = $10,000 of wagered play. At a 3.5% house edge that is an expected loss of $350 during the rollover — considerably more than the $50 won. In practical terms, a $50 win at Zodiac is not withdrawable; a $5,000 win (a tier-two jackpot hit) carries a $1M rollover that is practically unachievable; the $1M top-tier hit would carry a $200M rollover, which is why Casino Rewards jackpot wins are typically paid as a separate direct wire rather than cash-balance credits.
| Casino | Spins/Chances | Wagering | Example $20 win → rollover needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7Bit | 50 spins Blazing Bison | 45× | $900 |
| KatsuBet | 50 spins rotating | 45× | $900 |
| Mirax | 50 spins | 45× | $900 |
| Kiwi's Treasure | 50 spins Gold Blitz | 60× | $1,200 |
| Zodiac | 80 chances MMW | 200× on winnings | $4,000 (rarely applicable) |
| Lucky Nugget | 40 spins Arena of Gold | 200× on winnings | $4,000 |
The common mistake is comparing 45× wagering on winnings against a "no wagering" bonus and assuming the no-wagering version is automatically better. It often is, but not always. The trade-off is bonus cap. A no-wagering spin bonus almost always caps the maximum withdrawable at $50 or $100, regardless of how much the spins actually win. A 45×-wagering bonus has no cap — the winnings are yours if you can complete the rollover.
The maths: if the spin-winnings distribution has a fat right tail (one in 200 spin-sets wins $500+, even if the median is $10), then the uncapped 45× bonus is strictly better in expected-value terms than the capped no-wagering version. For ordinary sessions with median wins, the no-wagering bonus is simpler and usually equivalent.
Different games count differently towards wagering completion:
The rational strategy on 45× wagering is to clear it on a high-RTP, low-volatility pokie like Big Bass Bonanza (96.7% RTP) or Starlight Princess (96.5%), betting at or slightly above the minimum allowed. Do not try to clear on Book of Dead (volatile, streaky) or any jackpot pokie.
All five 45×-tier casinos enforce a maximum bet cap during bonus rollover, typically NZD 5 per spin. Breach the cap — even once — and the bonus funds are forfeited, not just the rolled winnings. The cap exists to prevent players from "splashing" a few high-bet spins to hit the jackpot before rollover completes. It is easy to trip accidentally if you leave the bet size from a prior session; double-check the coin value before every rollover session.
Take 7Bit or Kiwi's Treasure if you want a real slot session. Take Zodiac if you want jackpot exposure. Do not attempt to clear 200× wagering from a Casino Rewards win unless the win is at least five figures and you understand you are committing to serious play.