Bitcoin vs Ethereum for crypto casinos
A neutral, on-chain look at Bitcoin vs Ethereum as crypto-casino deposit rails — how many operators actually settle on each, how much real money we can see moving, and the network characteristics that matter for depositing.
Settlement figures are external-facing flow (real deposits/withdrawals, wash/treasury volume excluded), updated continuously from indexed on-chain data.
| Metric | Bitcoin | Ethereum |
|---|---|---|
| Operators settling here (tracked) | 7 | 37 |
| 7d external settlement (tracked) | $3.6M | $808.1M |
| Confirmation speed | ~10-minute blocks (casinos usually wait 1–3 confirmations) | blocks every ~12 seconds, final in a minute or two |
| Typical fee | fees that vary with mempool congestion | gas can run several dollars and spikes with congestion |
Bitcoin for casino deposits
Native Bitcoin casinos exist and appeal to players who already hold BTC or value censorship-resistance, but Bitcoin is a small single-digit share of actual deposit flow compared with stablecoins — it suits large, infrequent transfers more than frequent play.
Ethereum for casino deposits
Casinos use Ethereum for larger transfers and for the reputation and deep liquidity of ERC-20 USDT/USDC, less for high-frequency small deposits where the gas fee bites. It is the security-and-liquidity chain, not the cheap-and-fast one.
Which should you choose?
There is no universal winner — it depends on how you play. For frequent, small stablecoin deposits, the cheaper and faster chain wins because fees compound; for large, infrequent transfers, deep liquidity and network reputation matter more than saving a few cents of gas. What actually protects you is not the chain but the operator's solvency: check proof of reserves and independent trust ratings before depositing on either. See the full deposit-currency breakdown for where money really moves.
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Methodology & disclaimer. Figures are derived from on-chain transfers attributed to wallets we associate with each operator, plus third-party ratings shown with their source. Blockchain attribution carries inherent uncertainty, and reserves are an all-chain best-effort estimate from mapped wallets — coverage varies by operator. These pages describe observed activity and third-party data only; they are not an endorsement of any operator and not a statement on any operator's solvency, legality, fairness, or safety, and nothing here is financial, legal or investment advice. See how we attribute on-chain activity · about us · report a correction. Data updates roughly every 30 minutes. 18+ only. Gambling can be addictive — see responsible gambling resources.