Ethereum Casino Proof of Reserves
Can these casinos actually pay you? Verification guide for ETH players
Proof of Reserves Reality Check
Most Ethereum casinos do not publish proof of reserves. As of February 2026, we found no casinos in our database with complete Merkle-tree proof of liabilities combined with on-chain asset verification. Some publish wallet addresses (partial asset proof), but none provide the full cryptographic verification that would let you independently confirm solvency.
This page explains how proof of reserves works and what to look for. The casino list below is sorted by trust indicators (rating, licensing, track record) rather than verified reserves.
What is Proof of Reserves?
Cryptographic proof that all player balances are included in the total claimed liability
Signed messages proving the casino controls claimed wallet addresses
Assets ≥ Liabilities = Casino can pay all players simultaneously
Ethereum Casinos by Trust Indicators
Sorted by rating, licensing, and track record. No casino below has published complete proof of reserves.
470% up to $1,600 total (casino), $2,195.10 total (sports)
Why Proof of Reserves Matters for Ethereum Players
When you deposit ETH at a casino, you're trusting that casino to hold your funds safely and pay you back when you win. Unlike traditional banks, Ethereum casinos aren't subject to mandatory reserve requirements or regular solvency audits. This means a casino can appear operational while being technically insolvent—unable to pay all players if they withdrew simultaneously.
Proof of reserves is the cryptographic solution: a way for casinos to prove they hold more ETH than they owe players, without revealing individual balances. Using the same SHA-256 hashing that secures the Ethereum blockchain, players can independently verify solvency.
Unfortunately, most casinos haven't implemented this technology. Until they do, players must rely on secondary trust indicators: licensing, track record, and withdrawal processing consistency.















