Ask any payment processor what “high risk” means and you’ll get a different answer every time. Ask an iGaming operator what it’s cost them in declined applications, frozen reserves, and processors that vanished mid-integration, and you’ll get a much more consistent story. iGaming sits at the intersection of two things banks are trained to avoid — gambling and cross-border payments — which is exactly why the standard advice (“just apply for a regular merchant account”) wastes months before anyone admits it was never going to work.

This guide covers what actually determines approval, what fees you should expect to see on a term sheet, and which red flags kill applications before a human even looks at them.

Why iGaming Gets Classified as High Risk in the First Place

It’s not really about trust. It’s about statistics. Card networks track chargeback ratios by merchant category code, and gambling — even fully licensed, regulated gambling — carries structurally higher chargeback and dispute rates than, say, a SaaS subscription business. Add in the regulatory patchwork (a casino licensed in Curaçao serving players in a dozen currencies looks nothing like a business with one home jurisdiction) and most acquiring banks simply opt out rather than build the compliance muscle to handle it properly.

That’s the gap a high risk merchant account is built to close: acquiring that’s priced and structured for the actual risk profile, instead of pretending the business is something it isn’t.

What Underwriters Actually Look At

Before a single fee gets discussed, underwriting wants to see:

None of this is exotic. It’s mostly paperwork that a compliant operator already has sitting in a folder somewhere — the trick is having it organized before the application, not scrambling to produce it after a request comes back.

The Approval Timeline, Realistically

Generic advice online will tell you “24-48 hours” for merchant account approval. For iGaming specifically, that’s rarely true, and any processor promising it for a genuinely high-risk gambling business should raise an eyebrow rather than relief.

A more honest timeline:

  1. Initial application review — 1-3 business days, mostly to confirm the basics are in order and there isn’t an obvious dealbreaker (unlicensed jurisdiction, sanctioned country exposure, etc.).
  2. Underwriting deep dive — 5-10 business days. This is where licensing, processing history, and website review happen in parallel.
  3. Terms negotiation — a few days back and forth on rates, reserve percentage, and settlement schedule once underwriting is satisfied.
  4. Technical integration — depends entirely on your platform, but a week is typical for a standard API integration with test transactions before going live.

Two to four weeks end-to-end is a realistic range for a well-prepared application. Applications that stall for months are almost always missing documentation, not victims of an unusually slow processor.

Fee Structures: What’s Normal and What’s a Warning Sign

High-risk iGaming acquiring costs more than standard e-commerce processing — that’s not a negotiating tactic, it reflects real chargeback exposure the acquirer is carrying. What you’re negotiating is whether the specific numbers on your term sheet are reasonable for your risk profile, not whether high-risk pricing exists at all.

Expect to see, and be prepared to question if they’re notably outside these ranges:

The number that matters most isn’t any single line item — it’s the total effective cost once reserve holds, chargeback fees, and processing fees are combined against expected volume. Ask for that total in writing before comparing offers.

Card Acquiring: What to Confirm Before Signing

Mastercard acquiring is the backbone of most iGaming payment stacks, and it’s worth confirming explicitly which card scheme(s) a processor supports for your specific MCC before signing anything — support for one region or currency doesn’t always mean support for all of them. Ask directly:

Red Flags That Slow Down or Kill an Application

What a Working Setup Actually Looks Like

Once approved, a properly configured high-risk merchant account for iGaming should give you: a dedicated account manager who actually answers when a payment gets stuck (not a ticket queue), Mastercard acquiring across the currencies your player base actually uses, a reserve structure you understand and can forecast against, and settlement timing that matches your operational cash flow needs rather than fighting them.

That last point gets underweighted constantly. A processor with slightly better headline rates but unpredictable settlement timing can cost an operator more in working-capital stress than a processor with clearer, if marginally higher, published fees.

Getting Started

If your iGaming business already has its licensing house in order and 3+ months of processing history (or a clear plan if you don’t), the application process is faster than most operators expect going in. Polydirection built its high-risk merchant account specifically around businesses that traditional banks decline on sight — crypto, gambling, and forex — with Mastercard acquiring, transparent fee structures, and an actual account manager assigned to your case from day one.

Start your application at merchant.polydirection.com — have your licensing documents and recent processing statements ready, and expect a real answer within days, not months.