1xBet Withdrawal Scam: Real Cases and What You Can Do
One of the most reported complaints across Trustpilot, Reddit, and betting forums is 1xBet blocking or refusing withdrawals the moment a user achieves a significant win. Fake 1xBet clone sites take this further — they never process any withdrawal at all. The pattern is consistent: small test withdrawals are approved to build trust, then the platform invents reasons to freeze the account when the user tries to withdraw a larger sum.
Common excuses given to delay or deny withdrawals on both real and fake 1xBet platforms include: requesting additional identity verification documents that never satisfy requirements, claiming a 'wagering requirement' from a bonus the user did not knowingly accept, flagging the account as a 'multi-account' without any evidence, and technical error messages that repeat indefinitely with no resolution timeline.
The company has scammed me. Everything was fine until I won eight bets in a row and decided to withdraw my funds. I started getting error messages — withdrawal rejected by operator.
Steps to Take if Your Withdrawal Is Refused
If your withdrawal is refused, document everything immediately. Screenshot every communication, your account balance, transaction history, and any bonus terms. Submit a formal complaint via email and request a case number. If the platform is licensed, file a dispute with the licensing authority. For Curacao-licensed operators, contact the Antillephone N.V. gaming control board.

For fake 1xBet clones with no real license, recovery is extremely difficult. You may report the domain to Google Safe Browsing, your country's cyber crime police unit, and consumer protection agencies. Warn other users by posting detailed reviews on Trustpilot and relevant betting forums. Your report could prevent others from losing their money to the same platform.



