484 offers · page 2 of 41

Free Spins List

How spin value, wagering, and withdrawal caps interact on free spins

Spin count is what operators put in headlines. It's the number that tells you the least about what a free spins offer is actually worth. Three terms determine the real outcome, and they chain together: spin value sets the bonus pool, the wagering multiplier sets the playthrough target, and the withdrawal cap sets the maximum payout.

From spin count to bonus pool: what spin value determines

The operator assigns a monetary value to each free spin, typically between 10p and 25p on designated slot games. This spin value, multiplied by the number of spins, creates the bonus pool. An offer of 50 spins at 10p each produces a bonus pool of £5. But 20 spins at 25p each produce the same £5 pool, despite the lower spin count.

Spin count alone doesn't tell you the pool size. Two offers with identical spin counts can produce very different bonus pools depending on the value per spin.

How the wagering multiplier applies to the free spins bonus pool

The wagering multiplier tells you how many times the bonus pool must be played through before any withdrawal is permitted. Here's how it chains:

  1. The operator assigns a spin value (e.g., £0.10 per spin)
  2. Spin value multiplied by spin count gives the bonus pool (e.g., 50 spins x £0.10 = £5.00)
  3. The wagering multiplier is applied to the bonus pool (e.g., 40x wagering on £5.00 = £200 total wager required)
  4. The player must wager £200 on eligible slot games before requesting any withdrawal from bonus winnings

Some operators apply wagering to winnings from the spins rather than to the bonus pool itself. The terms specify which base applies. Both approaches are permitted under LCCP, but they produce different playthrough targets from the same spin allocation.

When a withdrawal cap makes the playthrough irrelevant

A withdrawal cap sets the maximum amount a player can take out from free spins winnings. If the cap is £20 and the wagering requirement would theoretically allow larger withdrawals, the cap overrides. The player can't withdraw more than £20 regardless of completing the playthrough.

This creates situations where the wagering requirement is technically achievable but functionally constrained. A player who meets all wagering conditions and accumulates £150 in bonus balance still walks away with the capped amount. The cap is the binding constraint, not the multiplier.

How free spins differ from other welcome offer components

Free spins are often bundled into welcome packages alongside deposit bonuses or free bets. The terms for the free spins component can differ from the terms for the deposit bonus within the same offer. Understanding which terms apply to which component matters because the wagering base, multiplier, and cap can all be different.

Wagering base: spins vs deposit bonuses

On a deposit bonus, the wagering base is usually the bonus amount or the deposit plus bonus combined. On free spins, the wagering base is typically the bonus pool (spin value times spin count) or the winnings generated from the spins. The distinction matters because a 35x multiplier on a £100 deposit bonus creates a £3,500 playthrough target, while 35x on a £5 free spins bonus pool creates £175.

When both components appear in the same welcome offer, each carries its own wagering calculation. The combined obligation is the sum of both.

Why spin-specific terms override the package headline

A welcome offer advertised as '100% up to £100 + 50 free spins' has two distinct sets of terms. The deposit bonus portion has its own wagering requirement, its own withdrawal cap, and its own time limit. The free spins portion has separate values for each. The headline presents it as one offer. The terms treat it as two.

Each offer card on this page isolates the free spins component with its specific terms, regardless of whether the spins are standalone or part of a larger welcome package.

No-deposit and no-wagering free spins: what the distinction means

These two terms describe different conditions, and having one doesn't mean having the other. An offer can provide free spins without requiring a deposit but still carry wagering. An offer can waive wagering but still require a deposit. The distinction is structural, not promotional, and getting it wrong changes what the offer actually delivers.

What no-deposit free spins require instead of a deposit

No-deposit free spins means the operator doesn't require a qualifying payment to activate the spins. Account registration and identity verification are still mandatory for all UKGC-licensed operators. Wagering requirements, withdrawal caps, game restrictions, and time limits typically apply. The 'free' part is the entry condition, not the outcome.

No-deposit free spins from UKGC-licensed operators are less common than deposit-required offers. The entry barrier is lower, but the playthrough conditions attached to winnings are typically the same, and withdrawal caps can be tighter.

What no-wagering means and what conditions remain

No-wagering free spins means winnings from the spins convert directly to withdrawable cash without a playthrough requirement. Withdrawal caps, game restrictions, and time limits can still apply. The wagering condition is removed, but the other constraints aren't automatically waived.

Saferwager's offer pages separate these two categories: no-deposit offers list all offer types with no qualifying payment, and no-wagering offers list those with no playthrough requirement. Each page shows the same term detail and operator data as this listing, filtered to the specific condition.

Data Snapshot

484 Offers Tracked
246 UK Licensed Sites
11.5x Avg Wagering
230 Avg Spins

Frequently Asked Questions

Do free spins have wagering requirements in the UK?
Most free spins offers from UK-licensed operators carry wagering requirements. The multiplier is typically applied to the bonus pool (spin value multiplied by spin count), not to the gross winnings. No-wagering free spins exist but usually still have withdrawal caps or game restrictions. LCCP requires operators to disclose all wagering terms before the customer opts in.
What does spin value mean on a free spins offer?
Spin value is the monetary amount each individual spin is worth, typically ranging from 10p to 25p. Multiplying spin value by the number of spins gives the total bonus pool, which is the base for wagering calculations. A higher spin count at a lower value per spin can produce a smaller bonus pool than fewer spins at a higher value. The withdrawal cap can then limit actual returns regardless of pool size.
Are no deposit free spins really free in the UK?
No deposit means you don't need to make a qualifying payment to claim the spins. Wagering requirements, withdrawal caps, game restrictions, and time limits still apply in most cases. UKGC-licensed operators also require account registration and identity verification. The cost isn't an upfront deposit but the conditions attached to any winnings from the spins.
How are wagering requirements calculated on free spins?
The wagering base is usually the bonus pool: spin value multiplied by spin count. A 40x requirement on 50 spins at 10p each means wagering through £5 forty times, totalling £200 in play. Some operators apply the multiplier to winnings instead of the bonus pool. The offer's terms specify which base applies, and a withdrawal cap can make the playthrough target irrelevant if the cap is lower than expected returns.
How do free spins terms differ from deposit bonus terms?
Free spins use the bonus pool (spin value times spin count) as their wagering base, while deposit bonuses use the bonus amount or the deposit plus bonus combined. A 35x multiplier produces very different obligations on each. When both appear in the same welcome offer, each component carries its own wagering calculation, withdrawal cap, and time limit. The headline presents one offer; the terms treat it as two.