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Reading the Jackpot Score

How Bit Jackpot's independent 0-10 Jackpot Score works: six weighted factors, the evidence checklist behind every rating, and why scores aren't for sale.

Bit Jackpot Editorial Updated Jul 11, 2026 · 3 min read
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The Jackpot Score is Bit Jackpot’s own rating for a crypto casino: a single number from 0 to 10, shown to one decimal place. It is an independent editorial judgement, not an average of user reviews, and not something an operator can pay to improve. This guide explains exactly what goes into it, so that when you read a score you know what it is telling you.

Six factors, fixed weights

Every Jackpot Score is a weighted average of six published sub-scores. Each sub-score is rated on its own, then combined using the fixed weights below. The weights never change from one review to the next, so two casinos are always measured on the same scale.

Factor Weight What it measures
Licensing & Safety 25% Whether a valid licence is verified on the regulator’s own register, plus the site’s security and fair-terms record.
Payout Speed 20% How quickly and reliably real withdrawals are paid.
Crypto Support 20% The range of coins and networks supported, and how smoothly deposits and withdrawals work.
Game Selection 15% The breadth and quality of games, including slots, tables, live dealer and jackpots.
Bonus Value 10% The genuine value of bonuses once wagering requirements and terms are taken into account.
Customer Support 10% How responsive, competent and available the support team is.

The weights total 100%. Licensing & Safety carries the most at 25% for a simple reason: if a casino is not properly licensed or will not treat you fairly, nothing else it offers is worth much. Payout Speed and Crypto Support follow at 20% each, because being paid promptly in the coins you actually use is the core of the experience. Game Selection is 15%. Bonus Value and Customer Support each carry 10%, and bonuses are judged for their real worth after terms, not their headline size.

No score without evidence

We do not publish a Jackpot Score until a review has cleared a fixed evidence checklist. Every one of these must be complete:

  1. The licence is verified against the regulator’s own public register, not just a logo on the casino’s homepage.
  2. There is at least one real deposit and withdrawal data point, or credibly aggregated player-report data, behind the Payout Speed rating.
  3. The current bonus terms are confirmed against the operator’s own terms and conditions page, not a marketing summary.
  4. There is a named editorial sign-off recorded internally, so a specific editor on our team is accountable for the published figure, even though the byline you see is the collective Bit Jackpot Editorial Team.

How and why a score changes

A Jackpot Score is not frozen. If a regulator suspends or revokes a licence, the Licensing & Safety sub-score falls immediately, and because it is the heaviest factor it drags the headline number down with it. Scores can also move when payout behaviour changes, when bonus terms are quietly rewritten, or when support quality slips.

What never moves a score is money. The Jackpot Score is not for sale, and it is not affected by whether we hold a commercial relationship with an operator. An affiliate arrangement cannot buy a higher rating, and a poor score stays poor no matter how a casino markets itself. In structured-data terms it is published as an editorial review rating, not as an aggregate of user ratings, because it represents our assessment rather than a crowd average.

Who does the rating

Reviews are researched, written and edited by the Bit Jackpot editorial team, organised into desks by specialism rather than around any single named personality. Where AI tools help with drafting or research, the output is reviewed and fact-checked by a person before anything is published. We do not publish unreviewed machine output, and we do not claim a process entirely free of AI assistance. You can read the fuller process in our review methodology and licensing verification policy.

Read a Jackpot Score as a starting point for your own judgement, not as a recommendation to gamble. A high score means a casino did well against our criteria; it does not change the fact that games carry a house edge and that the long-run expected outcome of wagering is a loss. Browse rated sites on our reviews page, and if gambling stops being fun, our responsible gambling resources are always one click away. This guide is not financial or gambling advice, and you must be 18 or over.