Spinrise Casino ID and Passport Verification Guide
Updated on June 27, 2026 by the editorial team
Before your first payout clears, Spinrise Casino ID and passport verification confirms that the account and the bank details behind it belong to the same person. It is a Curaçao licence requirement, not a delay tactic, and most players clear it once and never think about it again. Get the photo right the first time and approval usually lands in 24 to 48 hours.
This guide covers exactly which documents count, the small mistakes that get uploads bounced, and how to photograph your ID so the review team accepts it on the first pass.
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What documents actually get your account approved
The identity check asks for one piece: a government-issued photo ID. A passport works, so does a Canadian driver's licence, and in most cases a provincial photo card is fine too. The document has to be current, unexpired, and show your full name, date of birth, photo, and the expiry date clearly.
Spinrise also runs address and payment checks alongside identity. That means the full KYC set is a government-issued photo ID such as a passport or driver's licence, a proof of address issued within the last 90 days, and sometimes confirmation of the payment method you used to deposit. You will not always be asked for all three at once. Identity comes first, and the rest follows if the payout amount or the deposit method triggers it.
A few things that quietly cause problems before you even upload:
- The name on your ID has to match the name on your Spinrise account exactly. A shortened first name or a missing middle name is enough to stall a review.
- Expired documents are rejected outright. Check the date before you photograph anything.
- Screenshots of a digital licence stored in a phone wallet are usually refused. Use the physical card or booklet.
If your name changed after marriage or a legal update, upload your current ID and mention it in the live chat so the reviewer has context. That one message saves a back-and-forth.
The upload mistakes that cost you a day or two
Most rejections have nothing to do with the document itself. They come from how it was captured. A blurry corner, a cut-off edge, glare across the photo strip, and the file goes back for a re-take. Each round trip adds hours to a check that should take one.
Here are the errors the review team sees most often:
- Glare and flash reflection. A bright spot across your name or photo makes the data unreadable. Turn the flash off.
- Cropped edges. All four corners of the document must be inside the frame. Crop even one and the ID reads as tampered.
- Blur. If you cannot read the smallest print on your screen, neither can the reviewer.
- Low light. Dim photos hide security features and the numbers blur together.
- Editing. Never rotate, brighten, filter, or crop inside an app. Any edit flags the file as altered.
- Wrong file. Uploading the back when the front was requested, or a proof of address when they asked for ID, resets the whole queue.
Photograph the document flat, not held up in your hand where it bends and shadows fall across the surface. A curved licence throws the print out of focus at the edges. Lay it down and the whole card stays sharp.
How to shoot your ID so it clears on the first try
Good verification photos are boring photos. No angle, no flair, just a flat document in even light. Follow these steps and you rarely need a second attempt.
- Put the document on a dark, matte surface. A wooden table or a dark folder works. Avoid glossy countertops that bounce light back.
- Find soft, even lighting. Daylight near a window beats a ceiling bulb. Keep the flash off so there is no hot spot.
- Hold the phone directly above the ID, parallel to the surface, so the card fills most of the frame without any part touching the edge.
- Check that all four corners are visible and there is a small margin around the whole document.
- Tap to focus, then look at the smallest text. If you can read the fine print and the expiry date, take the shot.
- Capture both sides if a driver's licence or ID card is requested. A passport only needs the photo page.
- Review the image at full zoom before uploading. Sharp text, no glare, no shadow, every corner in shot.
Save the file as a standard JPG or PNG and upload it straight from your gallery. Do not run it through a scanning app that sharpens or recolours the image, since that processing can trip the tamper check. The plainer the file, the faster it passes.
Which ID gets you verified fastest, and what each one covers
All three accepted documents prove who you are, but they differ in how quickly they clear and what extra step they might save you. A passport carries the strongest identity data. A driver's licence often doubles as address proof if the printed address is current. The table below shows what to expect from each.
| Document | Proves identity | Doubles as address proof | Sides needed | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Passport | Yes, strongest match | No | Photo page only | Fastest identity approval; cleanest data page |
| Driver's licence | Yes | Sometimes, if the address is printed and current | Front and back | Players who want ID and address in one upload |
| Provincial ID card | Yes | Sometimes, same as above | Front and back | Anyone without a passport or licence |
If speed is your only concern, a passport is the safest pick because the photo page holds every field the reviewer needs in one clean image. If you would rather knock out two checks at once, a licence showing your current address can cover identity and stand in for proof of address, sparing you a second upload. Remember that Spinrise still asks for proof of address issued within the last 90 days, so an older licence address may not qualify on its own.
Common questions about Spinrise verification
How long does verification take at Spinrise Casino?
Identity checks usually complete within 24 to 48 hours, and up to three business days during busy periods. Clean, sharp uploads clear at the fast end of that window. Blurry or cropped files loop back for a re-take and add time.
Do I have to verify before I can play?
No. You can register, deposit, and play right away. Verification is required before your first withdrawal, so it makes sense to submit your documents early rather than wait until a payout is stuck in review.
Why was my ID rejected?
Almost always the photo, not the person. Glare, a cut-off corner, blur, low light, or an edited file are the usual causes. An expired document or a name that does not match your account also triggers a rejection. Re-shoot the ID flat in daylight with the flash off and it typically passes.
Is my document safe to upload?
Spinrise operates under a Curaçao licence, which mandates identity checks and secure handling of the files you send. Upload only through the account verification page or the official live chat, never by email to an address you cannot confirm.
Can I use a photo of a digital licence from my phone wallet?
Usually not. Screenshots of a digital ID stored in a phone wallet are refused because they lack the security features of the physical card. Photograph the real document instead.
Once your ID is approved, the same profile also needs a valid proof of address before a payout releases, so line both up together. If a document comes back rejected, our page on why verification gets declined walks through each fix. And when you are ready to cash out, the full list of payment methods and timings shows how fast each one clears after approval.
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