The Holding Tank — Casinos Under Observation
What it means when an operator is 'under observation' rather than recommended or delisted — how casinos enter the tank, and the two ways they get out.
Not every problem casino deserves to be burned to the ground on day one. Some just start drifting — slower payouts, a quietly rewritten bonus clause, a cluster of fresh complaints. When that happens, the operator goes into the Holding Tank: under active observation, not yet condemned. The live list lives on the Audit Lab; this page explains what being in there actually means.
What "under observation" means
A casino in the Holding Tank is one where we've seen a warning sign that isn't yet a confirmed disqualifier. We pause or qualify our recommendation, watch it more closely than usual, and give the operator a window to correct course before we make a final call.
How a casino lands in the tank
- A withdrawal that stalled, went to manual "review," or slowed sharply versus our original stopwatch test.
- A material Terms change flagged by the Watchdog — a worse bonus clause, new restricted countries, a quietly added KYC reservation.
- A surprise identity check on a site we'd classified as anonymous (see KYC Classification).
- A rising pattern of credible community complaints we haven't yet confirmed ourselves.
How a casino gets out — or doesn't
There are two exits. Fix the issue — pay the stalled withdrawal, roll back the hostile clause, restore honest behaviour — and the operator returns to normal standing on its next test. Or let it get worse, or rack up a confirmed disqualifier, and it moves from the Holding Tank to the Burn Pile. The criteria for that final step are on Red Flags & Delisting.