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BassBet Casino Review NZ 2026: Sports Betting, Odds & Verdict

Independent assessment of BassBet's sportsbook product for New Zealand-resident bettors — odds quality, market depth on rugby, league and AFL, live in-play behaviour, NZD and crypto payment rails, and dispute-resolution reality. Tested in our June 2026 window. Offshore Curaçao-licensed only — not licensed by the NZ Department of Internal Affairs and not part of the TAB NZ statutory framework.

Written by: Dr Lena Whittaker — compliance & responsible-gambling editor.
Fact-checked by: Kahu Tipene — senior casino editor.
Last updated: 18 June 2026 · Test window: 5–17 June 2026 · 11 stake submissions and 9 payout submissions logged.

BassBet at a Glance

BassBet is a mid-tier offshore sportsbook operated under a Curaçao master licence and routed through the LynMonkel partner network. The brand sits at position #12 in the rfacdn.nz NZ sports index for June 2026 — solid in coverage of headline NZ-relevant competitions (Super Rugby Pacific, NRL, All Blacks tests, AFL, EPL, A-League, cricket internationals) but margins on premium markets run wider than the top three sportsbooks we track. Live in-play works and cash-out is real, although latency lags the leaders by 2 to 4 seconds. The cashier supports NZD as a base currency and accepts USDT-TRC20, BTC, ETH and a small basket of e-wallets. BassBet is appropriate for a Kiwi recreational bettor who wants global market breadth alongside NZ-relevant cards and is willing to accept the offshore licensing posture and the absence of a NZ statutory dispute path. There is no NZ sports-betting licence — the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 explicitly excludes sports from its 15-licence regime.

Launched (sportsbook)2021
LicenceCuraçao (post-2024 GCB master licence)
Parent / partner networkLynMonkel affiliate portfolio
CurrenciesNZD, AUD, USD, EUR, CAD, BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC, LTC
Headline sportsRugby Union, NRL, AFL, Cricket, Football, Racing, Esports
Payout window (NZ, crypto)30 min median · 90 min p95
Min / max withdrawalNZ$25 min · NZ$7,500 weekly standard cap
Live in-playYes — full cash-out and partial cash-out on multis
MobileResponsive PWA · iOS & Android browser-first
NZ-licensed?No — TAB NZ holds the statutory monopoly
Our overall score3.9 / 5

BassBet Payout Speed: Cash-Out and Market Settlement Timeliness

For a sportsbook, "payout speed" is more nuanced than for a casino. It splits into three discrete experiences: cash-out settlement on live in-play markets, market settlement after final whistle, and withdrawal of the cleared balance to a player's wallet or bank account. We tested all three at BassBet between 5 and 17 June 2026. We placed 11 stakes across rugby, NRL, AFL, football and tennis markets, executed 6 in-play cash-outs at various match states, and submitted 9 withdrawal requests across crypto, e-wallet and NZD bank-transfer rails.

Cash-out settlement on settled markets — the moment you click "Cash Out", the figure quoted is what lands in your balance — was prompt: the median settlement was under two seconds, and the slowest cash-out we observed was a 5-second wait during a Super Rugby try-scoring sequence when the entire market was briefly suspended. Partial cash-out worked correctly on a five-leg NRL multi we ran. Market settlement after a final whistle was less consistent. Rugby internationals and EPL fixtures settled within 5 minutes; AFL finals settled within 8 minutes; lower-tier football and obscure tennis qualifiers occasionally sat unsettled for 30 to 60 minutes. We did not observe any disputed settlements during the test window.

Withdrawal speeds were mid-tier rather than market-leading. USDT-TRC20 crypto withdrawals cleared in 30 minutes at the median with a 90-minute 95th-percentile result. BTC was slightly slower because of network confirmations rather than BassBet's processing. E-wallets (Skrill and Jeton) averaged 18 hours median and 48 hours p95. NZD bank transfers to ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac and Kiwibank cleared in 36 hours median and 96 hours p95, with Friday-evening submissions queuing to Tuesday morning. BassBet publishes a pending review window of "up to 24 hours" but in practice we measured pending phases of 1 to 4 hours during NZT business hours.

SurfaceMedianp95Notes
Cash-out settlement (in-play)< 2 sec5 secPromptly credited
Market settlement (premium)5 min12 minRugby, NRL, AFL, EPL
Market settlement (niche)30 min60 minLower-tier tennis, esports
Crypto withdrawal (USDT-TRC20)30 min90 minWeekends honoured
E-wallet withdrawal18 hr48 hrSkrill, Jeton
NZD bank transfer36 hr96 hrWeekend → Tuesday

If you want post-match settlement speed and a fast trip from balance to your bank, BassBet is adequate but not best-in-class. Crypto rails are the realistic route for fast cash-out at the brand, and we recommend NZD-bank players verify KYC at signup to avoid the additional review trigger on first withdrawal.

BassBet Bonus Offer for NZ Sports Bettors

BassBet's sportsbook welcome offer rotates and is best read live in the cashier rather than restated from marketing copy. In our June 2026 sampling, the structural attributes were broadly typical of the offshore Curaçao sector. We do not recommend that any Kiwi player chase a sportsbook bonus — odds quality and cash-out reliability matter materially more to long-run outcomes than a one-off free-bet credit. That said, here is what we tested.

The bonus does not slow payouts because cleared deposit-funded winnings are withdrawable regardless of bonus state. If you do not want a bonus, the opt-out is straightforward at the cashier. NZ advertising rules under the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 prohibit affiliate marketing of online casino products to NZ residents, and sports operators are outside that 15-licence regime — but the same harm-minimisation framing applies, and we encourage Kiwi bettors to treat all sportsbook promotions sceptically.

Payment Methods at BassBet for Kiwi Players

BassBet supports NZD as a native base currency, which removes FX spread on every transaction — an important detail because most offshore sportsbooks force EUR or USD as the base currency and then ding Kiwi players for 1.5 to 2.5 percent FX on each deposit and withdrawal. Visa and Mastercard work for deposits but withdrawals to cards are frequently kicked back by NZ-issuer banks (ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac, Kiwibank) for "high-risk merchant" reasons that are out of BassBet's control. POLi Payments closed its retail integrations in 2024 and BassBet does not offer POLi or a direct POLi alternative; for NZD bank-transfer withdrawals, payouts route through a Curaçao acquiring bank and arrive as standard credit transfers to your NZ bank account.

MethodDepositWithdrawalMin / maxFee
USDT-TRC20 / USDC / BTC / ETH / LTCYesYes~NZ$25 minNetwork only
Visa / MastercardYesLimitedNZ$20–4,000Issuer-dependent
Skrill / NetellerYesYesNZ$25–7,500None at BassBet
Jeton / MiFinityYesYesNZ$25–5,000None at BassBet
Bank transfer (NZD)YesYesNZ$50–7,500None at BassBet
Neosurf voucherYesNoNZ$10 minNone at BassBet
Apple Pay / Google PayNoNoNot supported

The recommended Kiwi-player rail at BassBet is USDT-TRC20 for both deposit and withdrawal — the brand's fastest payout surface, the lowest friction with NZ-issuer banks, and the path that avoids the 36-hour-plus bank-transfer queue. If you must use NZD bank transfer, time your withdrawal submissions to Monday or Tuesday NZT business hours and verify KYC at signup, not on your first cash-out.

Sports Markets Coverage at BassBet

BassBet's sports surface covers the headline competitions Kiwi bettors actually use, with reasonable but not market-leading depth. We sampled odds across rugby, league, AFL, cricket, football, racing and esports during the test window. Here is what holds up and where the brand thins out.

Rugby Union and Super Rugby Pacific

All Blacks internationals, Super Rugby Pacific home-and-away and finals, the Bledisloe Cup, July international windows and the Rugby Championship are all available with the expected match-result, handicap, total points, half-time and full-time, first-try-scorer, anytime-try-scorer, and player-prop markets. Margins on Super Rugby finals we sampled ran roughly 4 to 5 percent overround — wider than the 2 to 3 percent at the top of our index but acceptable. Mitre 10 Cup / Bunnings NPC coverage is more limited; expect only the match-winner and total-points markets on minor fixtures.

NRL, State of Origin and Warriors

NRL home-and-away rounds, State of Origin (a particular focus for Kiwi bettors given Warriors-fan crossover), and finals all carry full market depth. Warriors home games at Mt Smart attract enhanced markets including first-try, anytime-try, total tries by each side, and player run-metre props. NRL prop depth is solid but not the deepest in our 2026 index — the top three sportsbooks publish more granular markets such as receive-the-ball-most or first 10-minute scoring sequences.

AFL

Home-and-away rounds and the AFL finals series carry head-to-head, line, total goals, first goal-scorer, anytime goal-scorer, margin bands, and player disposal props. Brownlow Medal voting markets appear in season. Coverage is adequate for NZ-resident AFL followers; depth on lower-profile mid-season fixtures is thinner than at 22bet or BetLabel.

Cricket

Black Caps internationals — tests, ODIs and T20s — get full pre-match and live in-play coverage, with deep markets on top-bat, top-bowler, runs in 6 overs, methods of dismissal, and series outcomes. IPL, Big Bash, T20 Blast and ICC events also covered. Domestic Plunket Shield is sparse — match-winner only on most rounds.

Football (EPL, A-League, international)

EPL, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A, Ligue 1, Champions League, Europa League, A-League Men and Women, Wellington Phoenix home fixtures, Auckland FC, and All Whites internationals are all covered with the expected 1X2, both-teams-to-score, totals, Asian handicap, correct score, and player-goalscorer markets. Bet-builder and same-game multi tooling is competitive on EPL and UCL but thinner than the leaders elsewhere.

Horse and harness racing

BassBet runs a thin racing surface compared to TAB NZ's domestic fixed-odds card. International majors — Melbourne Cup, Cox Plate, Sydney Autumn Carnival, Royal Ascot — are covered with win, place and exotic options. Domestic NZ Thoroughbred and harness meetings are listed but with shorter market trees. If racing is your primary sport, TAB NZ is the deeper book.

Esports, UFC and niche sports

Counter-Strike Majors, League of Legends Worlds, Dota 2 The International, and Valorant Champions Tour are all covered. UFC pay-per-view cards, boxing world-title fights, NFL regular season and Super Bowl, NBA regular season and finals, and tennis Grand Slams are all available. Niche additions include darts, snooker and table tennis.

Live Betting Experience at BassBet

Live in-play is where a sportsbook's product engineering shows. We tested BassBet's live surface across rugby, NRL, AFL, cricket and football fixtures during the test window. The feed runs on a competent third-party data layer; end-to-end latency from broadcast event to displayed market price was 4 to 8 seconds in our sampling — typical for offshore sportsbooks but noticeably slower than the 2 to 4 seconds we measured at Rooster.bet, 22bet and BetLabel.

Cash-out is available on the vast majority of live markets, including partial cash-out on multis. Cash-out values refresh every 2 to 3 seconds, which is fast enough for most decision-making. Bet acceptance is reasonably quick at around 1 second per submitted stake under typical load; we did experience two re-quotes on rugby penalty-kick markets during a high-traffic Super Rugby final, which is normal industry behaviour during volatile sequences.

Market suspension behaviour during significant in-game events (try-scoring sequences, breakdown penalties, set-piece changes, dismissals in cricket) follows industry norms — markets pause for 5 to 25 seconds while the trading desk re-prices, then come back live. We did not observe any unusual aggressive suspensions designed to deny cash-outs. Live streaming is offered on a subset of fixtures including some football, tennis and basketball — but not on rugby internationals, NRL or AFL, which is the structural limit of the data-licence model BassBet runs on.

For a recreational Kiwi bettor placing stakes on rugby, league or AFL with a live broadcast running on screen, BassBet's live in-play is workable. For a serious live-bettor optimising the 1-to-2-second arbitrage window between odds movement and broadcast event, the leaders at the top of our index are materially better.

Mobile Experience at BassBet

BassBet is browser-first — no native iOS or Android app, which we treat as a positive because it sidesteps Apple App Store and Google Play gambling restrictions and avoids the force-update cycle that plagues native casino and sportsbook apps. The site behaves as a progressive web app: add-to-home-screen on iOS Safari or Android Chrome yields a near-native experience with full-screen presentation and persistent login. Cashier rendering on small screens is correct, with no horizontal scroll on iPhone 13 or Pixel 7.

KYC submission on mobile works: the document-upload screen accepts photos directly from the camera, and the EXIF metadata is preserved for the AML reviewer. Crypto withdrawal submissions on mobile completed at the same medians as desktop in our test set. Live in-play on mobile renders the same cash-out and bet-builder surfaces as desktop, though the screen real estate constraints make multi-leg builders fiddlier. Two screenshot placeholder slots are reserved here for the mobile cashier withdraw screen and the live in-play match view.

Mobile cashier screenshot (placeholder)
Mobile in-play match view (placeholder)

Licensing, Safety & Dispute Resolution

BassBet operates under a Curaçao Gaming Control Board (GCB) master licence under the post-2024 Curaçao regulatory regime. The licence number is published in the site footer; the issuing operator is a Curaçao-registered B.V. Player funds are notionally segregated under GCB rules, although enforcement of segregation is materially weaker than under the Malta Gaming Authority or the UK Gambling Commission. BassBet uses standard TLS for the cashier; no eCOGRA or GLI third-party audit is currently listed. The brand is not licensed by the New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs, and under the current statutory framework no NZ sports-betting licence is available — TAB NZ retains the statutory monopoly under the Racing Industry Act 2020, and the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 explicitly excludes sports betting and lottery products from its 15-licence regime.

If you have a dispute, the path is: (1) raise with BassBet support via in-app chat or email, (2) escalate to the licensee complaints address published in the licence section, (3) escalate to an independent alternative-dispute-resolution body (ADR). There is no NZ statutory dispute route for BassBet — the DIA's jurisdiction under the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism Act 2009 covers AML compliance only, not bet-settlement or sportsbook-product disputes. Honest trust differential: a Curaçao-licensed offshore sportsbook carries materially more counterparty risk than TAB NZ. BassBet's track record on AskGamblers and CasinoMeister at the time of writing is broadly clean with no major outstanding complaints, but historical reliability does not guarantee future behaviour. Kiwi bettors should always keep transaction screenshots, settlement screenshots and KYC submission records.

If gambling is causing harm, free, confidential, 24/7 help is available — call the Gambling Helpline NZ on 0800 654 655, text 8006, or visit gamblinghelpline.co.nz. Māori Helpline: 0800 654 656. Pasifika: 0800 654 657. Asian Family Services: 0800 862 342. Tailored counselling, peer support and self-exclusion tools are all available without cost.

BassBet Pros & Cons

Pros
  • NZD as a native base currency removes FX spread on every transaction.
  • 30-minute crypto withdrawal median is solid for offshore offshore sportsbooks.
  • Full NZ-relevant market coverage: Super Rugby, NRL, AFL, Black Caps, A-League.
  • Working cash-out and partial cash-out on multis.
  • Weekend crypto submissions are honoured — no Monday-morning queue.
  • Mobile PWA is responsive and KYC submission from camera works correctly.
Cons
  • Margins on premium NZ-relevant markets run 1 to 2 percent wider than the index leaders.
  • Live in-play latency lags the top three sportsbooks by 2 to 4 seconds.
  • NZ$7,500 weekly withdrawal cap binds higher-volume bettors until manual VIP review.
  • Curaçao licence is materially weaker than MGA or UKGC for player protection.
  • No NZ statutory dispute route — offshore licensee ADR is the only recourse.
  • Racing depth is thin compared to TAB NZ's domestic fixed-odds card.
  • Niche-market settlement occasionally lags 30 to 60 minutes after final whistle.

How BassBet Compares to the Top 3 NZ Sportsbooks

BassBet sits at position #12 in the rfacdn.nz NZ sports index. The three closest peers above the brand are Rooster.bet (#1), 22bet (#2) and BetLabel (#3). Rooster.bet leads on rugby and league depth for NZ markets, with the tightest margins on Super Rugby and NRL we tracked in 2026 and 15-minute crypto withdrawals. 22bet runs the broadest global market book in the lineup — 80+ sports, deep European football coverage, and 1,000+ live events per day at peak with odds at roughly 95 percent of Pinnacle. BetLabel is the closest match to BassBet in scope but with tighter margins, a faster live in-play surface, and 20-minute crypto medians.

BrandCrypto medianLive latencyBest marketScore
Rooster.bet15 min2–3 secNRL & Super Rugby4.7
22bet20 min3 secGlobal football4.6
BetLabel20 min3–4 secEuropean football4.6
BassBet (this review)30 min4–8 secRugby & A-League3.9

If you are choosing between BassBet and the top three, the practical differentiator is margin and live latency. For a recreational Kiwi bettor placing two or three stakes a week on Super Rugby, NRL or the All Blacks, BassBet's product is workable — but the leaders give back 1 to 2 percent of expected value through tighter margins, and the faster in-play surface matters when cash-outs and live wagers are on the table. The full ranked list lives at our online betting sites pillar.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is BassBet legal for NZ players to use?
BassBet operates under an offshore Curaçao licence and is not licensed by the New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs. TAB NZ holds the statutory sports-betting monopoly under the Racing Industry Act 2020, and the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 explicitly excludes sports betting from its 15-licence regime — meaning no offshore sportsbook can obtain a NZ sports-betting licence. There is no NZ statutory enforcement against individual bettors who use offshore sportsbooks, but there is also no NZ-specific consumer-protection or dispute-resolution route. We do not claim BassBet is NZ-licensed or recommended by NZ authorities.
How fast does BassBet pay out winnings to Kiwi bettors?
In our June 2026 testing window, BassBet posted a 30-minute median payout via USDT-TRC20 crypto with a 90-minute 95th-percentile result. Skrill and Jeton e-wallet withdrawals averaged 18 hours median; NZD bank transfers to ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac and Kiwibank cleared in 36 hours median with a 96-hour p95. Cash-out settlement on settled in-play markets is typically within seconds, and market settlement on premium fixtures is within 5 to 12 minutes of final whistle.
What sports markets does BassBet cover for NZ bettors?
BassBet covers the headline NZ sports — Super Rugby Pacific, Rugby Championship, All Blacks tests, NRL including State of Origin and Warriors fixtures, AFL home-and-away and finals, international and domestic cricket, EPL and A-League football, ATP/WTA tennis, esports (CS, LoL, Dota), UFC and boxing pay-per-view, NFL and NBA. Horse and harness racing markets are available but thinner than TAB NZ's domestic card.
Is the BassBet live in-play betting experience reliable?
Yes, with caveats. End-to-end latency on the live feed runs 4 to 8 seconds behind broadcast — typical for offshore sportsbooks but slower than the 2 to 4 seconds at the top of our 2026 index. Cash-out and partial cash-out work correctly and refresh every 2 to 3 seconds. Market suspensions during in-game events follow industry norms.
Are BassBet winnings taxable in New Zealand?
Inland Revenue's longstanding position is that recreational gambling winnings are not assessable income for individual NZ-resident bettors — you do not pay NZ income tax on a one-off sportsbook win. If sports betting forms a regular, systematic, business-like activity it may be reclassified as taxable; this threshold is rarely crossed by recreational bettors. This editorial is not personal tax advice; consult a chartered accountant if uncertain.
How does BassBet compare to TAB NZ for Kiwi bettors?
TAB NZ is the only operator with a NZ statutory sports-betting licence and is the only operator that returns a portion of turnover to NZ sporting codes via the TAB's statutory distribution model. BassBet offers wider international market depth (basketball, esports, niche European football leagues) and accepts crypto deposits and withdrawals that TAB NZ does not. Margins on premium NZ-relevant markets — All Blacks, NRL, Super Rugby — are wider at BassBet in our sampling than at TAB NZ. There is no NZ regulatory dispute path for BassBet.

Final Verdict

BassBet is a mid-tier offshore sportsbook that earns its position #12 ranking in the rfacdn.nz NZ sports index for June 2026. The product works: NZD as a base currency, the full set of NZ-relevant competitions, working cash-out, mobile PWA that doesn't break on small screens, and crypto withdrawals that clear in 30 minutes at the median. None of those are best-in-class, but together they are credibly above the floor. The trade-offs are also honest — wider margins than the leaders give back 1 to 2 percent of expected value, the live in-play surface lags by 2 to 4 seconds, and the NZ$7,500 weekly cap binds higher-volume bettors. The Curaçao licence carries more counterparty risk than MGA or UKGC, and there is no NZ statutory dispute path because no offshore sportsbook can obtain an NZ licence. For a recreational Kiwi bettor who wants global market breadth alongside Super Rugby, NRL, AFL and A-League cards, and who is comfortable with the offshore licensing posture, BassBet is workable. For serious live bettors or volume bettors, the leaders at the top of the pillar — Rooster.bet, 22bet and BetLabel — give back meaningfully better margins, latency and limits.

Score breakdown
  • Odds quality: 3.7 / 5
  • Market depth: 4.0 / 5
  • Live betting & cash-out: 3.8 / 5
  • Payment methods: 4.1 / 5
  • Mobile experience: 4.0 / 5
  • Licensing & dispute path: 3.5 / 5
  • Responsible-gambling tooling: 4.0 / 5
  • Overall: 3.9 / 5
Ready to test BassBet's sportsbook?

First-deposit sportsbook welcome offer available — see operator site for current terms. New Zealand residents only; 18+; full T&Cs apply at the cashier. Crypto rails recommended for fastest withdrawal. BassBet is not licensed by the NZ Department of Internal Affairs and is not part of the TAB NZ statutory framework.

Play at BassBet →

Sponsored link. 18+. Gamble responsibly. If gambling is causing harm, free 24/7 help is available — call 0800 654 655, text 8006, or visit gamblinghelpline.co.nz. Asian Family Services: 0800 862 342.