Jeet City Review Australia: Real Payout Times, Best Methods & KYC Tips for Aussies
Here's the short version of how jeetcity-aussie.com actually pays out. It's based on what we saw from Australia, not just what the cashier promises. Think of this table as the "how it really went" log, not the glossy marketing pitch. It's built on tests from Aussie accounts.
+ 100 Free Spins, 40x Wagering, 5 Days Only
Plenty of methods that fly in Europe just fall over here for Aussies. It's annoying, but totally normal. Some options look "instant" on paper... then your bank goes, nope. That's why the real-time column matters way more than the marketing blurb.
| π³ Method | β¬οΈ Deposit Range | β¬οΈ Withdrawal Range | β±οΈ Advertised Time | β±οΈ Real Time (AU tests) | πΈ Fees | π AU Available | β οΈ Issues for Aussies |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa / Mastercard | A$30+ (exact max depends on your issuer) | N/A (usually shunted to bank transfer or another method for payouts) | Instant deposit | Some deposits go through straight away; plenty get declined by big Aussie banks like CommBank, Westpac and NAB | 0% from casino; bank FX margin typically 2 - 4%, plus possible cash-advance style fees | Partially (many cards blocked for gambling MCCs) | High decline rate, no reliable card withdrawals for most Australian players, and a risk of your bank frowning at repeated gambling transactions |
| Neosurf | A$20 - 250 per voucher (you can stack more than one) | N/A (deposit-only) | Instant deposit | Instant in testing, as long as the voucher code is valid | 0% from casino; reseller mark-up when buying vouchers at the servo or online | Yes | No way to withdraw back to Neosurf. You'll need to add MiFinity, crypto or bank transfer later for cashouts, which means more KYC. |
| MiFinity | A$30+ | A$30 - 4,000 per transaction (subject to overall weekly/monthly caps) | Instant both ways | 1 - 12 hours after casino approval in AU tests | 0% from casino; MiFinity may charge modest FX/withdrawal fees to your Aussie bank | Yes | KYC required both at the casino and at MiFinity itself; response times can feel very "office hours Europe" from an Aussie time zone. |
| Crypto (BTC, ETH, LTC, USDT, DOGE via CoinsPaid) | ~ A$30 equivalent (0.0001 BTC etc.) | A$30 - 4,000 per transaction (approx., then subject to weekly/monthly cashout caps) | Instant deposits, instant withdrawals | Roughly 15 minutes - 4 hours including casino approval plus blockchain confirmations | Casino 0%; blockchain network fee + exchange spread when turning it back into Aussie dollars | Yes (via AU-friendly exchanges/wallets) | Crypto price swings, exchange-side delays, and user error risk - send it to the wrong network or address and it's gone for good. |
| Bank Transfer (International wire) | N/A for deposit (not offered for Aussie players) | Min A$500; up to about A$4,000 per individual transaction | 3 - 5 business days | 5 - 10 business days after 24 - 72 hours "Pending" at the casino, plus non-business days and any bank holidays - it genuinely feels like you're watching paint dry while nothing seems to move. | Casino 0%; intermediary and receiving banks often clip A$20 - A$50 per transfer in combined fees - a nasty surprise when you were already sick of waiting. | Yes | High minimum, slow, unpredictable SWIFT chains and fees; not great if you just want to pull out a couple of hundred after a decent night on the pokies, and honestly feels overkill for what should be a simple cashout. |
Real Withdrawal Timelines
| Method | Advertised | Real | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crypto (USDT) | Instant | 15 min - 4 h π§ͺ | Testing 10 - 15.12.2024 from NSW |
| MiFinity | Instant | 1 - 12 h π§ͺ | Testing 10 - 15.12.2024 from NSW |
| Bank Transfer | 3 - 5 business days | 5 - 10 business days π§ͺ | Testing 10 - 15.12.2024 with AU bank account |
30-Second Withdrawal Verdict
If you'd rather watch the footy than read all this, fair. Here's the short, money-moves-only version for Aussies.
Everything here matches the overall score we've given Jeet City and what Aussie banks usually do with offshore gambling. The quick verdict isn't just plucked from thin air - it reflects our December 2024 tests and how local banks and wallets behaved.
- FASTEST METHOD FOR AU PLAYERS: Crypto (especially USDT via CoinsPaid) is usually the quickest. In our tests it was often under an hour, and only dragged out towards four hours a couple of times. Seeing a cashout land while you're still half-watching the footy is a nice shock to the system. Expect crypto to land pretty fast - roughly in that under-an-hour to a few-hours window once they hit approve, based on the December runs.
- SLOWEST METHOD: Old-school bank transfers are the crawl. After Jeet City hits 'approve', you're still waiting a working week or two in real life. Bank wires are the proper slow lane - think at least a week door to door, and longer if you clip a weekend or public holiday.
- KYC REALITY: Your first cashout nearly always kicks off full KYC. In practice that added a day or two for us; one test dragged closer to three and felt like it was never going to tick over. Plan on KYC adding a couple of days to the whole thing. If your docs are fuzzy or mismatched, it can easily stretch beyond that and you'll be kicking yourself for not sorting them properly upfront.
- HIDDEN COSTS THAT STING AUSSIES: The stuff that really stings Aussies isn't on the Jeet City side - it's the banks and wallets in the middle. Wires skim a chunk in flat fees, FX margins quietly nibble at every conversion, and crypto has its own network and exchange bite. Where it hurts most: wires clipping $20 - $50 a pop, cards and wallets taking a few percent each time you bounce in and out of AUD, and crypto charging small but constant network and exchange fees.
- OVERALL PAYMENT RELIABILITY RATING: Payment reliability feels like a solid 7 out of 10 from an Aussie point of view - you're likely to get paid, but you'll swear at the banking side now and then. If I had to slap a score on it, I'd give payouts about a 7/10: generally paid, just slower and more fiddly for Aussies than for a lot of Euro players.
WITH RESERVATIONS
Main risk: Fiat withdrawals - especially via bank transfer - are slow, have high minimums, and can be chipped away by fees you don't see on the cashier page.
Main advantage: For Australians comfortable with MiFinity or crypto, payouts are usually relatively quick and cleaner than what you'll see at a lot of other offshore casinos.
Withdrawal Speed Tracker
Every withdrawal at Jeet City basically has two chunks: the casino dragging its heels, then your bank or wallet doing its thing. Think of it as two queues, not one - first you wait on Jeet City, then you wait on your bank or crypto network.
Once they finally hit "Send", the rest is out of Jeet City's hands - crypto and MiFinity usually move, bank wires just plod. After that, it's all on your payment route. Crypto and MiFinity zip along; SWIFT crawls, no matter which offshore casino you're using.
| π³ Method | β‘ Casino Processing (Jeet City) | π¦ Provider Processing | π Total Best Case (AU) | π Total Worst Case (AU) | π Usual Bottleneck |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crypto (USDT / BTC etc.) | Auto/manual review: 0 - 12 h for established accounts; 24 - 72 h for first withdrawals or chunky wins | Blockchain confirmations: 5 - 60 min depending on coin and network congestion | ~ 15 minutes (small amount, verified account, off-peak) | ~ 4 days (slow KYC + weekend + busy network) | Casino KYC and risk review - not the chain itself |
| MiFinity | Manual check: usually 1 - 12 h, slower if it lands outside their finance team's usual working hours | Internal MiFinity transfer: often within minutes | ~ 1 h | ~ 3 days if it hits a Friday/Saturday here and you're mid-verification | Jeet City's finance queue and extra questions on your first few payouts |
| Bank Transfer | Pending: up to 48 h is typical; KYC or extra checks can add another 24 - 72 h | SWIFT/intermediary chain to AU: 3 - 7 business days on average | ~ 5 business days | ~ 10 business days or more, especially around Christmas/New Year or Easter | Combination of long "Pending" plus slow, fee-heavy international banking |
| Card "withdrawal" (usually redirected) | Request reviewed in 24 - 72 h; many AU card payouts get refused and re-routed | Bank-side "refunds" often blocked; casino then offers bank/alt methods instead | Best case similar to MiFinity or bank, depending on reroute | Highly variable; some attempts just end up cancelled and re-requested | Issuing bank's stance on gambling refunds and international merchants |
- To keep things moving: get your KYC out of the way early, avoid putting in fresh withdrawal requests late Friday or just before public holidays, stick to crypto or MiFinity where you can, and keep individual requests at sensible levels so they don't look like outliers.
- Avoid repeatedly cancelling and resubmitting withdrawals. Every time you do, you basically send yourself to the back of the line again - and crank up the risk of punting those winnings back through the pokies while you "just have a few more spins".
Payment Methods Detailed Matrix
Below is a breakdown of the main ways Aussies can move money in and out of Jeet City - what actually works from Sydney, Melbourne or Brissy, and what just wastes time and fees. Rather than just list every logo, this table focuses on what's practical for Aussies: which options feel smooth and which ones chew through your balance.
Short on time? Just read the Pros/Cons column - that's where the real Aussie pain points live. If you only glance at one bit, make it the Pros and Cons. That's where you'll spot which methods are likely to muck you around.
| π³ Method | π Type | β¬οΈ Deposit | β¬οΈ Withdrawal | πΈ Fees (Real World) | β±οΈ Speed (AU) | β Pros for Aussies | β οΈ Cons for Aussies |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa / Mastercard | Credit / debit card | Min A$30; max capped by your issuer or daily limits | Usually not used for cashouts to Australian cards; funds are redirected elsewhere | Casino charges 0%; your bank may add FX and treat some deposits like cash advances | Deposit: instant when approved; Withdrawal: unreliable to card itself | Familiar, quick way to get money in; in genuine disputes you do at least have access to your bank's dispute process. | Commonwealth, Westpac, NAB, ANZ and others regularly block or flag offshore gambling payments; payouts back to the same card are hit-and-miss at best. |
| Neosurf | Prepaid voucher | Min A$20; limited by denomination per voucher | Not supported (deposit-only) | Casino fee 0%; you pay a small premium when buying vouchers at local resellers | Deposit: instant in testing; Withdrawal: n/a | Good if you don't want "online gambling" plastered all over your bank statement; useful for a low-key top-up before a night playing online pokies. | You can't get money back via Neosurf, so at some point you'll still need a traceable method like MiFinity, crypto or bank for withdrawals - plus extra KYC. |
| MiFinity | E-wallet | Min A$30; upper limits based on your MiFinity verification level | A$30 - 4,000 per individual withdrawal request | Casino doesn't charge; MiFinity can apply small fees to send money back to your Aussie bank or card | Deposit: instant; Withdrawal: roughly 1 - 12 h once Jeet City has pressed "approve" | More reliable than many cards for Australians, quick to move money in both directions, no SWIFT fees or mystery intermediary banks. | You have to complete KYC with MiFinity itself, and banks can still get funny about funding certain wallets if they flag them as gambling-related. |
| Crypto (BTC, ETH, LTC, USDT, DOGE) | Cryptocurrency via CoinsPaid | ~ A$30 minimum equivalent per transaction | A$30 - 4,000 equivalent per transaction, then throttled by weekly/monthly limits | Casino 0%. Network fees can be cheap (e.g. LTC) or steeper (e.g. busy ETH); Aussie exchanges add their own spread when you cash out to A$. | Deposit: usually 1 - 30 minutes; Withdrawal: roughly 15 minutes - 4 hours total | By far the fastest route out for Aussies in most cases, and no bank in the middle to randomly knock back transactions because "gambling". | You need to be comfortable with wallets, addresses and networks; send to the wrong chain and the funds are gone. Price volatility can work for or against you between cashout and conversion. |
| Bank Transfer | International bank wire (SWIFT) | Not available for deposit from AU | Min A$500; roughly A$4,000 per individual payout, plus global caps | Casino 0%; intermediary and receiving banks often skim A$20 - A$50 total in fees, and FX spreads can apply if the transfer isn't in AUD. | Live tests showed 5 - 10 business days after casino pending time; longer across major holiday periods. | Money lands straight in your Aussie bank in one hit, no extra wallet layer in between - appealing for punters who prefer to stay away from crypto. | High minimum makes it useless for smaller wins; slow as a wet week; opaque fee chain. Best reserved for bigger cashouts where the fixed fee is less painful. |
- Best practical options for Aussies: Crypto or MiFinity, if you're happy to do a bit of set-up and understand they still carry normal gambling risk - they just make it easier to get your winnings off the site, and once you've seen a few near-instant payouts hit your wallet, it's hard to go back to lumbering bank wires.
- Methods to avoid unless you have to: International bank wires for anything under about A$1,000 - the minimum and the fees eat too big a chunk of a modest win.
Withdrawal Process Step-by-Step
If you know how a Jeet City withdrawal actually plays out, it's a lot easier to spot what's normal lag and what's them stuffing you around.
This walkthrough assumes you're playing in AUD from Australia and covers typical timings plus the traps that snag a lot of local players at each step.
- Step 1 - Open the cashier and switch to withdrawals
Log in, hit the cashier, and click on the withdrawal tab. Before you do anything else, check that your balance is real, withdrawable cash - not bonus funds or cash locked behind wagering.
What often goes wrong: You've grabbed a welcome promo and still have wagering left, or part of your balance is "bonus money". If you're not sure, ping live chat before submitting - it's better than finding out after a week of waiting that the request was invalid. - Step 2 - Pick your withdrawal method
In theory you're meant to withdraw via the same method you used to deposit. In practice for Aussies:- Neosurf is deposit-only.
- Many Australian cards can't receive gambling payouts back.
Tip: Ask chat, "Given I deposited with X from Australia, what are my options for withdrawal?" and get a clear answer before proceeding. - Step 3 - Enter the amount and respect the method limits
Minimums actually matter here. Try to yank $200 by bank wire and it'll just get bounced back into your balance sooner or later. If your win sits in that awkward hundred-to-few-hundred range, don't even bother with bank wires - stick to MiFinity or crypto instead.- Crypto / MiFinity: minimum A$30.
- Bank transfer: minimum A$500.
Practical move: If your win is in that awkward A$100 - A$400 range, steer away from bank transfers and go with MiFinity or crypto. - Step 4 - Confirm the request and take a quick screenshot
After you hit confirm, the withdrawal shows up as "Pending". At this point:- The money is earmarked for withdrawal but may still be reversible if you hit "Cancel".
- Nothing has been sent to your bank, wallet or exchange yet.
- Step 5 - Internal review and risk checks
Jeet City's finance/risk team checks:- Have you met wagering if you used a bonus?
- Did you breach their max bet or excluded games rules?
- Is your activity consistent with their AML policies?
- Verified regular, small crypto/MiFinity withdrawals: 0 - 12 hours.
- First withdrawal or larger wins: 24 - 72 hours.
- Step 6 - KYC (identity verification)
For most Aussie punters, your first serious withdrawal will trigger full KYC. Expect to be asked for:- Passport or driver licence (colour; all four corners visible).
- Recent bill or bank statement showing your name and address.
- Proof of the payment method you used (card photo, MiFinity screenshot, etc.).
- Step 7 - Payout sent to your chosen method
Once the finance team is happy, your withdrawal status flips to something like "Approved" or "Processed" and the money actually leaves the casino side.
Things that can still go wrong here:- Incorrect BSB/account number - the bank bounces it.
- Wrong crypto network or address - the funds go to the wrong place and usually can't be recovered.
- Card issuer refusing credits from this merchant - Jeet City then has to re-route the payout and try again.
- Step 8 - Money landing in your hands
Once it's "Processed":- Crypto: usually 5 - 60 minutes for enough confirmations, then it's visible in your wallet or exchange.
- MiFinity: often shows within minutes to an hour.
- Bank transfer: realistically 3 - 7 business days from that point for a standard Aussie account.
- Golden rule: Once you've hit "Withdraw", treat that money as gone from your gambling balance. Don't cancel "just for a few spins while I'm waiting". That's exactly how casinos turn fair dinkum winners back into losing punters.
KYC Verification Complete Guide
KYC is the boring, paperwork bit of gambling, but offshore sites like Jeet City won't pay you properly without it. Nobody signs up for the KYC fun, but at offshore joints like Jeet City it's not optional if you want your money out.
Being organised upfront is the best way to avoid your first decent win getting tied up for weeks over something silly like a half-visible address.
When Jeet City will push you into KYC
- Almost always on your first withdrawal, even if it's only a couple of hundred bucks.
- When your total withdrawals hit certain internal thresholds over time.
- If something flags in their risk systems - multiple cards, sharp bonus hunting, frequent VPN use, that sort of thing.
Typical documents you'll be asked for
- Government-issued Photo ID - Aussie driver licence or passport:
- Colour, high resolution, all corners visible.
- Must be valid and not past the expiry date.
- Details need to match the name and DOB on your account.
- Proof of Address - from within the last 90 days:
- Electricity, gas, NBN, rates, or a bank statement.
- Your full name and residential address must be clear.
- Payment Method Proof:
- Cards: Photo of the front only. Show first 6 and last 4 digits and your name; cover the middle digits and the CVV with a finger or tape.
- MiFinity: Screenshot of your account/profile page showing your full name and email.
- Crypto: Screenshot from your exchange/wallet with your name (where possible) and the relevant address.
- Source of Wealth/Funds: For big wins, they might ask for a recent payslip, bank history or other proof your gambling stakes come from legitimate income.
How and where to upload
- Most documents go through the secure "Verification" or "Profile" area inside your account.
- In some edge cases, support may ask you to email them instead, but insist on a secure upload link where possible.
- Standard review times are 24 - 72 hours, but weekends and multiple rejections can stretch that out.
From experience with Dama N.V. sites, including Jeet City, they can be pretty fussy on small details - glare, cropping, tiny mismatches - even when you're totally legit. Plenty of Aussie players report Dama N.V. casinos bouncing documents over small technicalities, which gets old fast when you've uploaded the same bill three times. Jeet City isn't the worst of the bunch, but it's still stricter than most local bookies.
| π Document | β What They Want | β οΈ Why Aussies Get Rejected | π‘ How to Make It Stick |
|---|---|---|---|
| Photo ID | Colour photo/scan, sharp, all edges visible, not expired | Cropped edges, heavy glare from overhead downlights, black-and-white scans, expired licence or passport | Lay it on a flat surface near a window, turn off flash, and zoom the photo on your phone to make sure every line of text is crystal-clear. |
| Proof of Address | Official bank or utility document dated within 90 days, full name and address | Cropped screenshot showing only part of the address, a document older than three months, or an online store invoice instead of a real bill | Download the PDF from your bank or take a straight, well-lit pic of a paper bill on the kitchen table. Make sure both your name and full street address are in frame. |
| Payment Card | Front side, first 6 and last 4 digits visible, cardholder name visible, no CVV code shown | Full card number and CVV in plain view, or a blurry snap where digits can't be read at normal zoom | Cover the middle digits and CVV with masking tape, then photograph. Double-check the last 4 digits match the card you used to deposit. |
| MiFinity Screenshot | Account/profile page with your full name and email | Cropped screenshot showing only part of the page, or nickname displayed instead of your legal name | Use desktop mode if you're on mobile; zoom out until your full profile is visible, then screenshot. |
| Selfie with ID | Your face + ID + a handwritten note (e.g. "Jeet City" + date) clearly visible | Arms too short so the ID is unreadable, dim lighting, hat/hood hiding half your face | Ask someone to take the photo for you, stand in front of a window during the day, hold the ID next to your face at the same distance from the camera. |
- If something gets rejected, don't accept a vague "document invalid" message. Ask support to spell out exactly what's wrong, fix that specific issue and only then re-upload. You're less likely to go in circles that way.
Withdrawal Limits & Caps
Jeet City's withdrawal caps don't look too scary at first glance, but they're a big deal if you actually smack a proper win. They dictate how long your money sits inside the casino instead of in your own account, and they're one of the main reasons serious winners end up frustrated.
There's a big difference between normal wins and jackpots, and between regular and VIP players. Don't assume you'll get a A$50k win as a single payout just because the cashier balance says A$50k.
| π Limit Type | π° Standard Player | π VIP Player (Higher Tiers) | π What It Really Means |
|---|---|---|---|
| Per-transaction minimum | Crypto / MiFinity: A$30; Bank: A$500 | Generally the same unless a manager cuts you a special deal | Anything under A$500 can't leave via bank wire, which is why MiFinity and crypto matter for low-to-mid range cashouts. |
| Per-transaction maximum | Roughly A$4,000 per withdrawal | May be increased on a case-by-case basis | You'll need to split bigger balances into multiple requests, but the weekly/monthly caps matter more than this number on its own. |
| Weekly limit | About A$7,500 total per week | Higher at top VIP levels if negotiated | Caps how much you can realistically move off the site each week, regardless of how fast each individual transaction is. |
| Monthly limit | About A$22,500 per month | Higher for high-roller VIPs | If you hit something like A$40k, expect it to be paid in chunks spread over at least two months. |
| Big win clause | Non-jackpot wins above roughly β¬15,000 (or equivalent) can be paid in monthly instalments of up to β¬15,000 | Some flexibility if you have a manager, but never assume | A very big win might be dripped out over many months. That's just how most Curacao-licensed sites operate. |
| Progressive jackpots | Paid in full, separate from normal monthly caps | Same | The one bright spot: proper progressive jackpots should not be sliced up under the normal limits. |
| Bonus max cashout (no-deposit/free spins) | Around A$75 equivalent | Same | If you spin up a nice win from free spins or a no-deposit deal, don't be shocked when anything above that amount is removed at withdrawal. |
Example: withdrawing A$50,000 as a standard player
- Monthly cap: ~ A$22,500. Even if everything runs perfectly:
- Month 1: A$22,500
- Month 2: A$22,500
- Month 3: final A$5,000
- You're looking at roughly three months of staggered payouts, minimum.
If you absolutely hate the idea of your own money sitting with an offshore casino for months, that's an important red flag to factor into whether this is the right venue for you - nothing's more tilting than watching a big win trickle out in slow monthly drips while you're just waiting to be done with it.
Hidden Fees & Currency Conversion
Jeet City loves the "0% fee" line in the cashier, and on their side that's fair enough. The sting for Aussies usually shows up at the bank and FX stage. You'll see "0% fee" in the Jeet City cashier, which is technically right - it's just that Aussie banks and wallets still clip you on the way in and out.
Over a couple of casual sessions this might not sound like much, but if you're consistently depositing and withdrawing larger amounts, those extra few percent really add up on top of normal gambling losses.
| πΈ Fee Type | π° Typical Amount | π When It Hits | β οΈ How an Aussie Can Minimise It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casino deposit fee | 0% from Jeet City | Every deposit | Check your bank/card/e-wallet fee schedule instead; that's where the bite usually is. |
| Casino withdrawal fee | 0% from Jeet City | Every withdrawal | Nothing to do here - focus on the external fees below. |
| International bank transfer fees | Roughly A$20 - A$50 total per wire | When money comes in over the SWIFT network to your Aussie account | Avoid wires for small wins; use MiFinity or crypto for sub-A$1,000 payouts. |
| FX margin (cards / some wallets) | Commonly 2 - 4% each way | Whenever AUD is converted to another currency and back | Play in AUD where available, and consider low-FX cards or multi-currency wallets. |
| Crypto network fees | From under A$1 on cheap networks up to several dollars on congested ones | Every time you move coins on-chain | Favour lower-fee networks like LTC or certain USDT chains, and avoid peak times if possible. |
| Wallet withdrawal fees (MiFinity etc.) | Small fixed or percentage fee | When you send money from the wallet to your Aussie bank | Check fee tables before choosing a wallet; batch withdrawals rather than dribbling out tiny amounts. |
| Inactivity/dormancy fee | Varies; can nibble away at small idle balances | On long-dormant accounts with a few dollars left | Withdraw or lose tiny leftovers; don't treat the casino as storage for spare change. |
| Multiple withdrawal handling charges | Sometimes applied if terms allow and you spam lots of small requests | Many tiny withdrawals in a short window | Stick to fewer, larger requests within the weekly/monthly caps instead of dozens of micro cashouts. |
| Chargeback handling costs | Varies by bank and casino policy | If you dispute card transactions as chargebacks | Keep chargebacks as a "last resort" tool only, not a shortcut for buyer's remorse on losing sessions. |
Concrete Aussie example (MiFinity, A$200 -> win -> withdraw A$400)
- You deposit A$200 to MiFinity from your Aussie bank. Your bank or MiFinity may take a small fee (say A$2 - A$5) for the top-up.
- You send that to Jeet City, play, and eventually withdraw A$400 back to MiFinity. Jeet City charges nothing for that.
- Later you cash out from MiFinity to your bank: again, a small fixed or percentage fee, depending on their schedule at the time.
- Net effect: even if you somehow break dead even in the casino over a long spell, you can still be down a few percent purely from payment friction. That's before you factor in the usual house edge on pokies and table games.
Payment Scenarios
To make it less abstract, here are a few real-world Aussie-style runs - from a first $100 dabble to a chunky multi-thousand win. Let's walk through a couple of typical situations: first small cashout, a decent crypto run, a bonus grind, and a proper big hit.
They all assume you haven't broken any rules around bonuses or game restrictions. If you have, expect more friction - up to and including confiscation.
Scenario 1 - First-time Aussie player (A$100 -> withdraw A$150 via MiFinity)
- Set-up: You deposit A$100 via MiFinity, skip the welcome bonus to avoid strings, and spin some pokies up to A$150.
- What happens:
- You lodge a A$150 withdrawal back to MiFinity.
- Within a few hours, the casino flags this as your first cashout and asks for KYC docs.
- You upload a clear ID and proof of address the same day.
- Verification takes roughly 24 - 72 hours; once approved, the withdrawal is processed.
- Funds hit MiFinity within 1 - 12 hours after approval.
- Realistic timeline: somewhere in the 2 - 4 day window from hitting "Withdraw" to seeing the funds in your wallet.
- Extra costs: No fee from Jeet City, but small charges at the MiFinity/bank level still apply.
Scenario 2 - Regular verified player (A$200 in crypto -> withdraw A$500 equivalent)
- Set-up: You're already fully verified. You deposit A$200 equivalent in USDT, have a decent run and end up with A$500 equivalent.
- What happens:
- You submit a crypto withdrawal for the full A$500 equivalent.
- The casino's system checks your play; as a clean, verified account you may get an auto-approval or a quick manual tick-off.
- CoinsPaid sends the USDT to your nominated wallet or exchange; the transaction confirms on-chain.
- Realistic timeline: usually 1 - 6 hours start to finish, often faster in practice for modest amounts.
- Extra costs: small network fee and whatever spread/fee your Aussie exchange takes when you lift it back into fiat.
Scenario 3 - Bonus hunter (A$100 + 100% bonus -> try to withdraw)
- Set-up: You deposit A$100, take the 100% match for a A$200 starting balance and start spinning.
- Fine print:
- Wagering is 40x the bonus = A$4,000 in bets required before withdrawing.
- There's a max bet per spin while the bonus is active (around A$7.50). One bet over that can nuke your bonus winnings.
- Many high-RTP slots and some table games either don't count fully, count at a reduced rate, or are completely excluded for wagering.
- What happens if you succeed: You survive the grind and finish wagering with, say, A$300 in your balance. You can then withdraw, but your first withdrawal will still go through KYC with the usual 24 - 72 h lag.
- Overall timeline: A few hours or days of actual play, then several days for KYC and withdrawal - longer if you accidentally break a rule and end up in a dispute.
Scenario 4 - Big Aussie win (A$10,000+ on slots)
- Set-up: You start with a few hundred, maybe with or without a bonus, and land a hefty base game or feature hit that sends your balance to A$10,000 or more.
- What happens:
- The casino almost certainly runs enhanced KYC and risk checks, possibly asking for a payslip, bank statement or other proof of funds.
- Verification and internal sign-off can take several days.
- Once cleared, you're still stuck behind:
- A weekly cap of around A$7,500; and
- A monthly cap of roughly A$22,500.
- If your win is big enough, they may formally split payments into monthly instalments under their "big win" clause.
- Realistic timeline:
- For A$10k: around 1 - 2 weeks to get everything approved and your full balance out, if you push up against the weekly cap.
- For much larger wins (A$40k+): expect multiple months of structured payouts.
- Extra costs: Bank wires hurt here if you split them into lots of smaller transfers; crypto lets you dodge much of that, but you take on volatility risk.
Bottom line for big hits: If you get a proper life-changing win, your number one job is to get as much of it offsite as fast as you can within the rules - and to avoid chasing even bigger scores with money you're meant to be withdrawing.
First Withdrawal Survival Guide
Most angry stories you hear from Aussies about offshore casinos start with that first withdrawal: "It's been pending for a week", "they suddenly want all this paperwork", "support keeps telling me to be patient". A bit of prep makes this stage much less painful.
Use this checklist as a practical, local-focused guide to getting through that first cashout with minimal drama.
Before you even click "Withdraw"
- Get KYC done early: Upload your ID and proof of address before you ramp up your stakes. It feels like a hassle when you've only got A$50 in there, but it pays off later.
- Think twice about bonuses: If your main goal is clean withdrawals, playing bonus-free is often the calmer option. If you do take promos, really read the wagering and max bet conditions or cross-check them with live chat.
- Pick your cashout method ahead of time: For most Aussie players that will be either crypto or MiFinity, not bank wires.
- Double-check your balance status: Make sure it's "real money" with no active bonus or remaining wagering. Ask chat to confirm if you're unsure - better a 5-minute chat than a 5-day argument later.
While submitting the withdrawal
- Open the cashier, go to the withdrawal section, and choose your method.
- Enter an amount that matches the method's minimum and won't breach weekly caps if you plan multiple withdrawals.
- Confirm all details, hit submit and screenshot the confirmation - just in case things go pear-shaped.
What happens straight after
- Your withdrawal appears as Pending. For first-timers, this almost never flips to "Processed" instantly.
- Within a short time you're likely to receive an email or account message asking for KYC docs. Check your spam folder too.
- Once you've submitted clean docs, the review phase can take 24 - 72 hours - sometimes faster, sometimes slower if you run into a weekend.
- When approved, the actual payout is fairly quick for crypto and MiFinity, and stubbornly slow for bank transfers.
If it starts to drag
- Rejected withdrawal: Don't just re-click everything. Ask for a specific reason (e.g. "wagering incomplete", "minimum amount not met", "KYC failed due to ") and fix that first.
- Stuck pending for 72+ hours with no KYC request: Jump on live chat, quote your username and withdrawal ID, and ask for a concrete update.
- Marked "Processed" but nothing received: For crypto, ask for the transaction hash. For bank, ask for a payment confirmation or SWIFT details, then probe your bank if needed.
Realistic first-withdrawal expectations for Aussies
- Crypto: around 2 - 4 days including KYC.
- MiFinity: around 2 - 5 days including KYC.
- Bank transfer: easily 7 - 14 days end-to-end, especially if you clip a weekend or public holiday.
Withdrawal Stuck: Emergency Playbook
Sometimes even when you've done everything right, your withdrawal sits in limbo and you feel like you're getting fobbed off with the same canned lines in chat. Here's a structured way to chase it without just rage-spamming support.
This process is tailored to jeetcity-aussie.com but also matches how most Curacao-licensed casinos behave in practice.
Stage 1 (0 - 48 hours): Normal pending zone
- What to do: For the first two days, don't panic. Keep an eye on:
- Status in your account.
- Any incoming email asking for extra docs.
- Who to talk to: You don't really need to chase anyone yet unless you see a rejection message.
- When to escalate: Once it's been more than 48 hours with no movement and no KYC email, move to Stage 2.
Stage 2 (48 - 96 hours): Firm but polite live chat
- What to do: Open the live chat and give them your username and withdrawal ID. Ask for a specific update.
- Suggested wording:
"Hi, my withdrawal of requested on has been pending for more than 48 hours. My account is . Can you please tell me the exact reason for the delay and when it is expected to be processed?" - What you'll probably hear: Something about it being "in the queue" or "with the finance team", or a reminder to complete verification.
- When to step it up: If there's still no movement by the 96-hour mark and no clear explanation, it's time for email.
Stage 3 (Day 4 - 7): Written email complaint
- What to do: Email [email protected] so there's a written trail.
- Template:
"Subject: Withdrawal Pending > 4 Days - Request for Urgent Resolution
Dear Jeet City Team,
My withdrawal of requested on , transaction ID , has been pending for more than four days. My account is fully verified / I have submitted all requested documents.
Please process this payment as a priority or provide a clear written explanation of what is missing and the exact steps I must take. I would appreciate a response within 24 hours.
Regards,
" - Expected outcome: In many cases this nudges the request along or gets you a more detailed explanation than chat scripts.
Stage 4 (Day 7 - 14): Formal escalation
- What to do: If the first email doesn't resolve it, send a second one marked as a formal complaint and make it clear you're considering external bodies.
- Template:
"Subject: Formal Complaint - Unresolved Withdrawal > 7 Days
Dear Manager,
Despite previous contacts via chat and email, my withdrawal of from remains unpaid. My account has been verified and I have complied with all terms and any document requests.
Please treat this as a formal complaint under your procedures. If this is not resolved within 72 hours, I will consider submitting a complaint to independent dispute platforms and your licensing authority. I would prefer to resolve this directly with you if possible.
Regards,
" - Expected outcome: Often at this level, a senior support or risk staff member steps in and either pays out or gives a solid timeline and explanation.
Stage 5 (After 14+ days): External options
- What to do:
- If you're still waiting after about two weeks, you're in proper "this isn't normal" territory. That's when it's worth filing a detailed case on places like AskGamblers or Casino.guru and, if you've got the patience, nudging the Curacao licence validator.
- Once the delay blows past the two-week mark with no clear reason, treat it as serious. Put everything in writing for mediators and, if you want to go further, flag it with Antillephone as well.
- Template summary for mediators/regulator:
"I am submitting a complaint regarding Jeet City (Dama N.V., license 8048/JAZ2020-013, domain jeetcity-aussie.com). My withdrawal of requested on has remained unpaid for days. My account is verified and I have complied with KYC and terms. Attached are screenshots of my balance, withdrawal history, verification approval, and all relevant correspondence." - Reality check: Curacao regulators aren't as hands-on as domestic Aussie regulators, but bringing public attention through independent sites often motivates operators to tidy up messy cases.
Chargebacks & Payment Disputes
When a casino is mucking you around, it's tempting to just run to your bank and hit the nuclear button - a chargeback. Used in the right scenario, it can claw back genuinely unjustified losses. Used in the wrong one, it can backfire badly.
At jeetcity-aussie.com, as with other Dama N.V. sites, a chargeback will almost always lead to your account being closed and any remaining balance being frozen, so consider it carefully.
Situations where a chargeback might be justified
- You have card transactions that you genuinely didn't authorise - possible card theft or fraud.
- You paid but never got access to your account, and support won't fix or refund despite reasonable attempts to resolve it.
- You have clearly legitimate, non-bonus winnings that the casino refuses to pay over a long period without valid reasons, and you've exhausted their internal process and external ADR channels.
Situations where you should not be charging back
- You simply lost more than you meant to and regret it.
- You didn't read the bonus rules properly and feel ripped off when a bonus balance was voided for a rule breach.
- You're impatient with KYC timeframes and try to pressure the casino by pulling payments back at bank level.
How disputes differ by method
- Debit/credit cards: Call your bank, explain what happened, and follow their dispute process. They'll expect evidence and may not support you if it boils down to "I gambled and lost".
- E-wallets (MiFinity): You can raise a dispute with the wallet provider; they'll look at the transaction trail and their own policies.
- Crypto: Classic chargebacks don't exist on-chain. Once you send coins out, the blockchain itself won't reverse anything. You rely on goodwill or policies of the receiving party only.
Likely casino response and consequences
- If you charge back Jeet City deposits, they'll almost certainly:
- Close your casino account.
- Confiscate any remaining balance (including pending withdrawals).
- Flag your details in internal risk systems used across other Dama N.V. brands.
Smarter alternatives, in order:
- Use the staged internal escalation process outlined earlier.
- Submit structured complaints to independent mediators with full documentation.
- Contact the licence validator if there's a clear breach of basic obligations.
- Only then, if you're clearly in the right and prepared to walk away from the casino permanently, consider involving your bank.
Payment Security
On the tech front, Jeet City runs on the common SoftSwiss platform with SSL and ISO 27001-style security in place - decent for an offshore joint, but not the same comfort as a local TAB app. In plain terms: your connection is encrypted and the platform is regularly audited, but you're still dealing with a Curacao-licensed casino, not someone overseen by NSW or VIC regulators.
What's in place on the tech side
- SSL/TLS encryption: Your logins and payment details are sent over encrypted connections (look for the padlock in your browser).
- Platform security certification: SoftSwiss has ISO 27001 certification, which is an industry standard for information security management systems.
- Two-factor authentication (2FA): You can enable 2FA on your account, usually via an authenticator app. This is highly recommended for Aussies using the same device across multiple gambling and banking apps.
What's not guaranteed by the licence
- No clear, public commitment that player balances are held in segregated trust accounts.
- No independent oversight comparable to what the likes of AUSTRAC or state regulators apply to licensed Aussie bookies.
- No insurance or compensation scheme if the operator goes broke or simply refuses to cooperate.
What to do if you spot something dodgy
- Unauthorised activity on your account:
- Change your password straight away.
- Enable or reset 2FA if you haven't already.
- Contact Jeet City support with timestamps and details.
- Contact your bank or wallet provider to block any compromised payment methods.
- Never give out full card details, CVV codes, or 2FA codes to "support staff" via chat or email - legitimate staff will never require those.
- Practical safety tips for Aussie punters:
- Use a dedicated card or wallet for gambling, not your main account for rent, bills and groceries.
- Withdraw winnings quickly instead of parking large sums in your casino balance.
- Avoid logging in and transacting on public Wi-Fi at cafes, airports or hotels.
AU-Specific Payment Information
Australian law treats offshore online casinos very differently from local betting sites. jeetcity-aussie.com operates under a Curacao licence and is not licensed by any Australian state regulator, which has a few knock-on effects for how you pay and how you're protected.
Here's what that means for payments if you're logging in from "Straya".
Best-fit methods for Australians
- Crypto (USDT, BTC, LTC): The most resilient path around AU bank limitations, with strong speed and privacy advantages if you know what you're doing.
- MiFinity: More user-friendly than crypto for many punters and often treated more kindly by Aussie banks than direct gambling merchant payments.
- Neosurf: Handy for deposits if you don't want direct gambling entries on your bank statement, though you'll eventually need a different method for withdrawals.
How Aussie law and banks see offshore casinos
- The Interactive Gambling Act 2001 goes after operators, not players. That means you're typically not breaking the law as an individual Aussie by playing at an offshore casino.
- The ACMA can (and regularly does) block access to certain gambling domains via Aussie ISPs. If jeetcity-aussie.com ever gets added to that list, you may find it suddenly unreachable without technical workarounds.
- Many Australian banks treat international gambling merchant codes as high-risk. That's why you'll sometimes see declined card deposits even when you've got plenty of funds.
Currency and tax considerations
- Where Jeet City offers AUD balances, that's ideal - it reduces the number of FX conversions. Always check which currency your account is actually set to.
- For most everyday punters in Australia, gambling winnings aren't taxed because gambling is treated as a hobby, not a business. If you're staking very large amounts or operating like a professional, it's worth talking to a tax adviser.
Dealing with bank blocks
- If your main bank knocks back deposits:
- Don't keep hammering the "Pay" button - that can make your account look more suspicious.
- Consider using a wallet like MiFinity as a buffer, if your bank allows that top-up.
- If you're comfortable with it, set up crypto through a reputable exchange that still works with Aussies.
- Be very wary of any "workaround" services claiming guaranteed casino payments in exchange for fees or crypto - that space is rife with scams.
What protection do Aussies actually have?
- You don't get the same recourse via AU financial ombudsmen as you would if you were dealing with a locally licensed bookie like Sportsbet or TAB.
- Your main safety nets are:
- Your bank's dispute process for truly unauthorised or clearly unfair transactions.
- Public complaints via independent platforms that track casino behaviour.
- Being proactive about responsible gambling (limits, self-exclusion) so harm doesn't snowball in the first place.
Because the formal protections are weaker for Aussies at offshore casinos, it's smart to treat Jeet City (and similar sites) as a high-risk entertainment product, not a financial product. Play for fun, with money you can comfortably lose, and withdraw early and often when things go your way.
Responsible Gambling & Local Support
Whatever payment method you use, the single most important thing is keeping your gambling under control. jeetcity-aussie.com has a dedicated section on responsible gaming tools, where you can:
- Set deposit limits, loss limits or session time reminders.
- Take a short "cool-off" break if you feel tilt kicking in.
- Set up longer-term self-exclusion if you need to step away properly.
Casino games - whether it's pokies, roulette, crash, or live dealer tables - are not a way to earn money or pay the bills. They're built so the house wins over time. Think of any money you deposit as the cost of a night out at the pub, and only play with what you can afford to lose without touching rent, groceries or bills.
If you're in Australia and gambling is starting to feel less like fun and more like pressure, it's worth having a yarn with someone outside the casino environment. Some free, confidential local options include:
- Gambling Help Online - 24/7 support at gamblinghelponline.org.au or on 1800 858 858.
- BetStop - the national self-exclusion register at betstop.gov.au, where you can block yourself from all licensed Aussie online betting providers in one hit.
Those services won't judge you for having a punt - they just help if things are getting out of hand. It's far better to act early than wait until you're in a proper hole.
Methodology & Sources
This page isn't written from Jeet City's promo material. It's based on test accounts we actually ran, plus how Aussie banks and wallets behaved in the wild. Rather than parroting the cashier page, we signed up, moved money in and out, and then cross-checked what we saw against player complaints and Dama N.V. patterns.
Where exact internal thresholds or rules aren't publicly available, they're inferred from player reports and Dama N.V. brand behaviour across multiple sites.
- Processing times: Built from direct test withdrawals run 10 - 15 December 2024 (crypto, MiFinity, bank transfer) and cross-checked against experiences reported on major complaint portals.
- Limits and fees: Taken from jeetcity-aussie.com payment pages and terms & conditions as of mid-December 2024, combined with typical fee schedules for international transfers into Australian banks.
- Regulatory context: Based on ACMA's published lists of blocked gambling domains and guidance about offshore interactive gambling services, plus the Curacao Antillephone 8048/JAZ2020-013 licensing framework.
- Security notes: Derived from SoftSwiss' public statements on ISO 27001 certification and inspection of the site's SSL/TLS configuration.
Limitations to keep in mind
- Casinos can and do adjust payment methods, limits and verification rules with little notice, so specific numbers might shift after this review.
- Not all Australian banks treat offshore gambling charges the same; some are far stricter than others, and those policies can change.
- Certain internal risk triggers are never publicly disclosed; some interpretations here are based on patterns rather than formal documentation.
All data and examples here reflect tests run in December 2024 and later checks up to March 2026. These numbers are current as of March 2026 and built on December 2024 test runs plus later spot-checks, and I was double-checking a few of them right after Australia got bundled out of the T20 World Cup group stage, which was a brutal reminder that there's no such thing as a sure thing in betting. Payment setups can change fast, so treat them as a snapshot, not a promise. This is an independent review for Australian players, not an official page or communication from jeetcity-aussie.com or Dama N.V.
FAQ
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From Australia, our tests showed crypto cashouts usually hitting within a few hours once approved, MiFinity often landing the same half-day, and bank wires dragging out to roughly a week or more. In practice, Aussies typically saw crypto in the wallet within hours, MiFinity by the end of the day, and bank wires somewhere around one to two working weeks by the time everything cleared.
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Your first withdrawal almost always triggers full ID checks, especially if you're playing from Australia. jeetcity-aussie.com will typically take a couple of days to review your documents, and if anything is blurry, cropped or doesn't match your account details, they'll knock it back and restart the clock. On top of that, the withdrawal itself sits in a pending queue. Put together, it's very normal for a first cashout to take several days, even with fast methods like crypto or MiFinity, as long as everything is in order and you haven't broken any bonus rules.
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In principle, the casino prefers you to withdraw back to the same method you used to deposit. In practice, that doesn't always work for Aussies - Neosurf is deposit-only, and many Australian cards can't accept gambling payouts. In those cases, jeetcity-aussie.com will usually let you switch to an alternative like MiFinity, crypto or bank transfer. It's best to confirm your options with live chat before submitting the withdrawal so you don't get caught in a cycle of cancelled requests and re-submissions.
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The casino itself doesn't charge withdrawal fees on the main methods, but that doesn't mean your payout is fee-free. For Aussies, the pain points are usually outside the casino: international bank transfers often lose a noticeable chunk in intermediary and receiving bank charges, card and wallet payments can carry FX margins when they move in and out of AUD, and crypto cashouts involve blockchain fees plus spreads at your Aussie exchange. None of that is labelled "Jeet City fee" in the cashier, but it still reduces how much you actually pocket in the end.
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The minimum withdrawal at jeetcity-aussie.com is generally around A$30 for crypto and MiFinity, which suits small-to-medium wins. For bank transfers, though, the minimum is a much more serious A$500. That high threshold makes bank wires a poor choice for casual Aussie players who just want to cash out a couple of hundred after a decent session on the pokies - you'll need to use MiFinity or crypto instead for those amounts or keep playing, which obviously carries more risk.
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Withdrawals can be canceled for a few common reasons. The amount might be below the minimum for the method (for example, trying a A$200 bank transfer), there may still be wagering left on an active bonus, your KYC might have been rejected, or you could have played restricted games or exceeded the maximum bet while a bonus was active. If this happens, don't just resubmit the same request - ask support to tell you exactly why it was canceled, fix that specific issue, then lodge a fresh withdrawal only when you're sure everything is in line with the terms & conditions.
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Yes, in practical terms you should assume you'll need to complete full KYC before your first meaningful withdrawal as an Australian player. While some offshore casinos technically allow very small cashouts before verification, jeetcity-aussie.com tends to request ID and proof of address once you try to withdraw real money, particularly if there have been bonuses involved or your total deposits are more than just a token amount. If getting paid quickly is a priority, it's smart to upload your documents and get verified well before you land a big win or try to cash out a chunk of your bankroll.
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While jeetcity-aussie.com is checking your KYC documents, your withdrawal usually just sits there in Pending status and can't progress. In most cases, you won't be able to play with that money unless you actively cancel the request - at which point it goes back into your balance and is fair game for more bets. From a protection point of view, it's better to leave pending withdrawals alone during verification, even if it's frustrating, rather than cancel them and risk spinning the lot away before the casino has a chance to pay you.
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Yes. As long as your withdrawal is still marked "Pending", there's usually a cancel option that pulls the funds back into your playable balance. While that might be handy if you genuinely entered the wrong amount or chose the wrong method, it's one of the main ways players talk themselves into blowing winnings they were about to receive. If your aim is to walk away with money in your bank or wallet, treat the cancel button as something you only use to correct mistakes - not as a way to keep gambling while you wait.
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The official reason for the pending period is security and compliance: checking for fraud, money laundering and breaches of bonus terms. In practice, a longer pending period also increases the chance that players will cancel their withdrawals and keep wagering. At jeetcity-aussie.com, a waiting window of a couple of days is considered normal, particularly for first-time or larger cashouts. Anything stretching much beyond that without a clear explanation is worth challenging politely through support and, if needed, via a written complaint.
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For most Aussies, crypto - particularly stablecoins like USDT or fast coins like LTC - is the quickest way to get money off jeetcity-aussie.com. Real-world tests show that once your account is verified and the request approved, you can usually see funds in your wallet or exchange within a few hours. MiFinity is the next best option, with withdrawals normally hitting your wallet later that same day after approval. Bank transfers are far slower and really only make sense for larger wins where the high minimum and fixed fees become less significant.
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To pull out crypto, pick the same coin you used, paste in the address from your wallet or exchange, and double-check the network before you hit confirm. After that, it's mostly waiting: Jeet City signs off, the transaction confirms on-chain, and the coins show up in your wallet or exchange. From there you can either leave them in crypto or swap them back into Aussie dollars, depending on how you like to handle your bankroll.
Sources and Verifications
- Operator site: jeetcity-aussie.com payment pages and cashier interface, accessed from NSW.
- Licence details: Antillephone N.V. validator for Dama N.V., licence 8048/JAZ2020-013.
- Platform security: SoftSwiss documentation noting ISO 27001 information security certification.
- Regulatory background: ACMA statements and public lists relating to offshore interactive gambling site blocking in Australia.
- Harm minimisation: Australian government and Gambling Help Online materials on safer gambling practices.