Independent reviews of every sweepstakes casino we have signed up for, played at, and cashed out from. We score each one on cashout speed, verification, bonus terms, support, and the rest of what keeps a site honest after the welcome bonus. Highlights below: This month’s highest rated, every site we have reviewed, and what makes a review worth trusting.
Last updated
2 June 2026
The six best sweepstakes casinos currently rated above 8.0 across our full scoring system.
Each review you see here is based on real testing, updated monthly, and always includes both the wins and the warning signs.
| Casino Name | Score |
| Ace Reveal | 4.1 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| BangCoins Casino | 8.4 / 10 |
| b spot | 8.0 / 10 |
| BCGame.us | 8.3 / 10 |
| BetRivers.net | 8.7 / 10 |
| BigPirate Casino | 8.7/ 10 |
| Big Shot Games Casino | 7.9/ 10 |
| BitPlay | 4.0 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Caesars Slots | 6.2 / 10 |
| Carnival Citi Casino | 6.6 / 10 |
| Casino Royale Sweepstakes | 3.8 / 10 |
| Casino.click | 9.1 / 10 |
| Celebrity Slots | 6.3 / 10 |
| Chanced Casino | 7.8 / 10 |
| Chumba Casino | 7.0 / 10 |
| Clubs Poker | 8.7 / 10 |
| CrashDuel Casino | 8.0 / 10 |
| Crown Coins Casino | 9.2 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Ding Ding Ding | 7.5 / 10 |
| DoubleDown Casino | 8.1 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Enchanted Sweeps | 6.6 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| FireKirin | 1.8 / 10 |
| Fliff Casino | 7.3 / 10 |
| Fortune Wins | 8.1 / 10 |
| Fortune Wheelz Casino | 8.7 / 10 |
| FreeSpin Casino | 9.4 / 10 |
| Funrize | 7.8 / 10 |
| FunzCity | 7.0 / 10 |
| Funzpoints | 8.0 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Galaxy Fortunes | 7.5 / 10 |
| Gambino Slots | 8.1 / 10 |
| Global Poker | 8.5 / 10 |
| Gold Party Casino | 7.8 / 10 |
| Gold Rush City Casino | 5.3 / 10 |
| Golden Dragon | 1.9 / 10 |
| Golden Hearts Games | 7.2 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Hard Rock Social Casino | 7.5 / 10 |
| Hello Millions Casino | 7.7 / 10 |
| High 5 Casino | 7.6 / 10 |
| Huuuge Casino | 7.5 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Inferno Slots | 1.7 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Jackpota Casino | 9.1 / 10 |
| Jackpot Sweeps | 2.3 / 10 |
| Jumbo88 | 9.0 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| LoneStar Casino | 8.3 / 10 |
| Lounge777 | 7.2 / 10 |
| Loyal Royal Casino | 7.0 / 10 |
| Lucky 777 Sweepstakes Casino | 2.0 / 10 |
| LuckyBird.io | 8.1 / 10 |
| LuckyLand Slots | 7.0 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Magic City 777 | 1.0 / 10 |
| McLuck | 8.5 / 10 |
| Mega Frenzy Casino | 8.0 / 10 |
| MegaBonanza | 8.8 / 10 |
| Milky Way 777 | 2.5 / 10 |
| MondoSweeps | 5.8 / 10 |
| Moonspin Casino | 8.4 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Hard Rock Neverland Casino | 7.3 / 10 |
| NoLimitCoins | 8.1 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Orion Stars | 1.4 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| PandaMaster | 1.9 / 10 |
| Paradise Sweepstakes | 3.6 / 10 |
| PENN Play Casino | 7.2 / 10 |
| PlayFame Casino | 7.6 / 10 |
| Pulsz | 8.7 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| RealPrize | 9.0 / 10 |
| Riversweeps | 5.3 / 10 |
| Rolla Casino | 7.5 / 10 |
| Royal Eagle | 1.0 / 10 |
| Ruby Sweeps | 6.6 / 10 |
| Rush Games | 6.4 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Scatter Slots | 7.1 / 10 |
| Scratchful | 8.0 / 10 |
| SCROOGE Casino | 6.0 / 10 |
| Sixty6 Casino | 8.1 / 10 |
| Skills And Slots | 2.4 / 10 |
| Skillz Games | 6.3 / 10 |
| Slotomania | 6.2 / 10 |
| Social Tournaments | 8.1 / 10 |
| SpeedSweeps | 8.3 / 10 |
| SpinToWin Slots | 6.5 / 10 |
| Spinfinite Casino | 7.5 / 10 |
| Sportzino | 8.2 / 10 |
| Spree Casino | 9.0 / 10 |
| Stake.us | 8.0 / 10 |
| Stardust Social Casino | 6.0 / 10 |
| Sunshine Sweeps Casino | 1.0 / 10 |
| SweepJungle Casino | 8.0 / 10 |
| SweepSlots | 4.2 / 10 |
| SweepSpot Casino | 6.8 / 10 |
| Sweepstake Mobi | 3.0 / 10 |
| Sweeptastic | 8.5 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| TaoFortune | 7.4 / 10 |
| The Money Factory | 8.1 / 10 |
| Gold Treasure Casino | 8.1 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Vblink | 1.9 / 10 |
| Vegas Gems | 4.0 / 10 |
| Vegas-X | 1.0 / 10 |
| Vegas7Games | 1.3 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Wandando Casino | 8.1 / 10 |
| WebSweeps | 3.3 / 10 |
| Wildhorse Bucks Casino | 6.7 / 10 |
| Wind Creek Social Casino | 7.7 / 10 |
| WinStar Social Casino | 8.3 / 10 |
| WOW Vegas | 8.9 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| Yay Casino | 8.0 / 10 |
| Yotta | 7.0 / 10 |
| Casino Name | Score |
| ZitoBox | 8.3 / 10 |
| Zula Casino | 8.4 / 10 |
| Zynga Poker | 7.9 / 10 |
You just scrolled past 100-plus scores. Fair question to ask who put them out there, and how those numbers came about.
A small team of 11 covering the US sweepstakes scene since 2023, including the ones running on crypto and the social casino crossover players actually run into. The whole operation rests on three founders who set the rules everyone else works by.
Every score on this page traces back to an account we opened with real money and ran through to a payout in hand. Nothing comes from press kits or operator briefings. Operators have tried every angle to move the numbers, from sweetened commission rates to demands that fail-grade reviews come down. The answer has been no every time.
The rules that keep it that way are written down, and casinos that fail their retests end up on the blacklist, with the original review annotated, not deleted.
Sometimes, operators pay us to review their site. This gives them an honest evaluation, nothing more. The score they earn is the score we publish, and the ranking they receive is the ranking they earned.
— Simon G., Co-Founder
The full version of how we stay independent from the operators we cover lives in our independence and integrity statement.
A review site can look professional and still be feeding you nonsense. The way to see through it is to stop reading the prose, and run the review through eight checks.
We built this list from the other side of the work. Testing sweepstakes casinos directly is what taught us what an honest review of one looks like, and where the weak ones, whether lazy, outdated or outright bought, give themselves away.
The fastest tell is specificity: “Verification took 14 hours, requested driver’s license plus a utility bill, first SC redemption hit Skrill in 28 hours” is something only an account holder could write.
Compare that to “Fast payouts and a great selection,” which could describe any gaming site on earth. When a writer can’t tell you how long their first redemption took, which ID documents got flagged, or which games stuttered on mobile, they never logged in. Wait times also swing wildly by redemption method, so skipping that detail tells you everything.
Quick test: Search the review for numbers. No hours, no dollar amounts, no screenshots? Skip it.
A reviewer who played long enough to find the good things also found the bad ones. Because every sweepstakes casino has them: missing live dealer lineups, capped daily redemptions, state lockouts, slow manual reviews on bigger cashouts.
That’s why a review with nothing but highlights tells on itself, and why the part of the page listing what the casino does badly is where you go to confirm it. ‘Could use more games’ is filler dressed up as balance. ‘Redemptions above $2,000 trigger manual review and add 3 to 5 business days’ is the kind of line that actually tells you whether this casino is worth your time.
Quick test: Count the specific weaknesses. Fewer than three? The reviewer didn’t look, or didn’t want to.
Even a review that clears the first two checks ages like milk. Sweepstakes casino bonuses get rewritten, states drop on and off the eligibility map, brands rebrand overnight, payment rails disappear without warning.
A visible “last updated” date inside the last few months isn’t a nice-to-have, it’s the price of entry. Without one, you have no idea whether you’re reading about the sweepstakes casino running today, or the ghost of one that closed shop two years ago.
Quick test: Find the update date. Hidden three scrolls down, nowhere on the page, or older than six months? The review describes a casino that may no longer exist.
A recent date proves the review is current. It doesn’t prove it’s honest. The next question is whether the reviewer is being paid to like the operator, and whether they own up to it.
Every major review site earns commissions (here’s how we earn ours). That part is fine. Hiding it isn’t. Honest sites name the relationship out loud, and tell you whether commissions shape the ranking order. When the number one casino on a list happens to be the one paying the highest commission, you’re not reading a ranking, you’re reading a billboard with footnotes.
Quick test: Look for the disclosure. Top of page, footer, or dedicated page? Good! Nowhere? Bye.
Disclosure exposes incentives. Methodology proves whether the score survived it.
So, ask yourself how the casino landed on 4.2 out of 5. A real review walks you through its math, weighing things that matter in sweepstakes territory, like licensing and sweeps rules compliance, redemption speed, or how the terms read once you open them (here’s how we rate every sweepstakes casino we cover).
Each factor needs a visible weight behind it, a percentage, a point share, anything that shows the score was built, not randomly assigned. A number without that logic is a verdict the reviewer wants you to accept on faith. But that faith stops paying out the moment your first cashout sits in pending limbo for three weeks.
Quick test: Can you reverse engineer the score from the text? If the number feels invented, it was.
Even an honest methodology can be applied poorly, so the last check happens off the review entirely. You take what the reviewer claims, and hold it up against what your fellow players are saying about the same sweepstakes site.
Neutral platforms are where that comparison lives, like Reddit threads on r/sweepstakesCasino, Trustpilot ratings, and player complaint forums, where nobody earns a commission for being nice. When a review brags about 24-hour redemptions, and a dozen players are documenting three-week waits, the review is either outdated or bought. One voice is an opinion. Three voices telling the same story across three platforms is a pattern you can act on.
Quick test: Spend two minutes on Reddit and Trustpilot for the same casino. Claims and player reports don’t line up? Trust the players.
The checks above interrogate what’s in the review. The last two interrogate how it’s written, because language is harder to forge than facts.
Real reviewers write lines like, “The mail-in entry method exists, but it’s three clicks deep in the footer, here’s the URL.” Brochures write “thrilling,” “world class,” “the ultimate gaming destination.” Strip the adjectives out and read what’s left. If the page collapses into nothing once you remove the praise, there was nothing under it to begin with.
Quick test: Highlight every adjective. If the remaining sentences say nothing, you’re reading good, old marketing slogans.
Tone exposes intent. Originality exposes whether a human ever sat at the keyboard.
Copy a sentence from the review into Google. If the same wording shows up on five other sites, the writer used a template and swapped a casino name in. Entire write-ups get cloned across this industry, and the bonus section is where the recycling shows worst because that’s the part nobody bothers to rewrite.
Quick test: Copy any sentence into a search bar. Multiple matches across other casino sites? Move on.
Run all eight questions in order, and you have a working filter. Did they play it? Real cons with real numbers? Recent update date? Affiliate disclosure on the page? Methodology with weighted factors? Neutral platforms back it up? Written like a human? Original wording?
If you can’t tick most of them off, the sweepstakes casino review is nothing but a lead.
Ticked fewer than six of the eight off? Treat the review as a research lead, and keep on drilling other sources before you sign up.
We built the system, so the answer should be yes. Every review on the site ships with an update date, screenshots from real accounts, a scoring breakdown that shows the weak factors as plainly as the strong ones, and a commission disclosure, sitting in plain sight.
But we’ll level with you: nothing stays clean in a market that turns over this fast. This is exactly why the third check on the list matters so much, and why we’re committed to running our own reviews against it.
Found one that no longer survives its own checklist? Tell us, and we’ll patch it or pull it down.
Most affiliate sites publish a score and link to the casino, and then stop. Every review on SweepCasinos shows how the score was built across the full set of factors in our methodology, lists specific weaknesses on the same page as the recommendation, and gets re-checked every month. The closing line of every review is the cashout time we measured from our own account, not the one the casino quoted us.
Every review on this page goes back through the testing cycle once a month. The ‘last updated’ date on each review is the date a human actually opened the casino, signed in, and re-verified the bonus terms, game library, and redemption flow. It isn’t a rolling timestamp.
A casino’s brand size doesn’t factor into our scoring. A site with millions of players can still have slow redemptions, weak support, or punishing bonus terms, and the score reflects what we measured during testing, not what the marketing says. Popular sweepstakes casinos scoring below the recommendation threshold on this page lost points on the parts of the experience that affect a player directly: cashout speed, fairness of terms, or quality of support.
The top of the list shows the highest-scoring sweepstakes casinos at the time of the last monthly check. Highest-scoring means strongest across the factors in our methodology: licensing and Sweeps Rules compliance, redemption speed, support response times, mobile experience, fairness of the terms, and several more. Highest-scoring doesn’t mean flawless, though. Every top-rated casino still has weak factors, and those weak factors are visible in the score breakdown on each review.
File a complaint on our complaints page. We log every report, watch for patterns across multiple players, and re-test the casino when the pattern points to a real problem. Casinos that fail the re-test land on our blacklist, with the original review annotated rather than deleted.