Hey — Jessica here. Look, here’s the thing: if you’ve ever felt the pokies, the TAB app, or an offshore site taking more than they should, you’re not alone. As a Kiwi who’s had a few too many cheeky punts (and learned some harsh lessons), I wrote this comparison to help experienced players in New Zealand understand how self-exclusion actually works, what laws and safeguards apply here in Aotearoa, and how to choose the right program without getting bogged down in jargon. Real talk: this is about keeping your wallet and whanau safe while still enjoying a punt now and then.
Not gonna lie — the first two sections give immediate, practical steps: how to sign up for self-exclusion in NZ and a side-by-side of domestic vs offshore options. In my experience, having a clear checklist and knowing the likely bank/payment friction points (POLi, Visa/Mastercard, and e‑wallets like Skrill) makes the whole thing less painful and more enforceable. If you read nothing else, use the quick checklist below and bookmark the regulators’ pages.

Next I’ll show the legal context in NZ and compare real-case examples so you can pick the best route; keep the checklist handy as we do that.
Real talk: New Zealand has a mixed legal setup. The Gambling Act 2003 governs domestic venues — that includes SkyCity, Christchurch Casino and Class 4 gaming (pokies in clubs and pubs). The Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) administers this regime and the Gambling Commission handles appeals and licensing issues. That means if you self-exclude from a local venue or TAB NZ, those bodies have clear duties to enforce exclusions. Offshore sites are different — they can accept Kiwi players legally, but enforcement relies on the operator’s terms and payment controls rather than NZ law. This distinction matters when you decide where to lock yourself out.
So, before you sign anything, check who regulates the operator: DIA/Gambling Commission for local, or the offshore jurisdiction (e.g., Curaçao) for international brands. And yes, check KYC and AML rules too: identity verification (passport or driver’s licence + utility bill) will typically be required if you ask for account closure or dispute a reactivation. That verification helps ensure your exclusion stays effective.
| Feature | Domestic (SkyCity/TAB/Class 4) | Offshore Sites (NZ-friendly) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal enforcement | High — DIA + Gambling Commission oversight | Limited — depends on operator policy and payment gatekeepers |
| Scope of exclusion | Venue-wide / national for TAB (physical + online TAB NZ) | Account-level; may not block other offshore sites |
| Duration options | Cooling-off, 6 months, 12 months, permanent | Varies — often 6+ months, some permanent; enforcement varies |
| Payment blocking | Possible via venue & local banks | Depends — POLi, Visa/Mastercard, Skrill/Neteller may still process |
| Support services | Integrated with NZ gambling harm providers | Operator support + external NZ services recommended |
That table helps you weigh the trade-offs; next I’ll walk through a few real-life mini-cases so you can see how this plays out.
Story: A mate in rural Waikato was losing NZ$50–NZ$200 a session on pokies at the local RSA and kept topping up with a saved Visa card. He self-excluded via the club’s manager and asked for card removal, but the temptations were still online via offshore sites accessible on his phone. He then contacted his bank and asked for a block on gaming transactions, and set a monthly deposit limit with his account. That combination — venue self-exclusion + bank card block + POLi flag — stopped most impulse deposits. Frustrating, right? But it worked.
The lesson: pair venue-based exclusion with payment-level controls (bank, POLi, Visa/Mastercard) and telecom changes from Spark or 2degrees if needed; this layered approach is far more effective than a single action.
Story: I’m not 100% sure how many Kiwis are fully crypto-only, but in my circle several mates use Bitcoin and Litecoin for offshore sites because withdrawals are fast and anonymous. One player self-excluded from his favourite offshore account but could still deposit via crypto because self-exclusion often doesn’t block blockchain rails. He had to go further: close his wallet, move funds to cold storage, and ask the operator to ban his wallet address. Not all sites will do that, so I suggested he set an additional cold-storage step and contact the operator’s support for account deletion.
Point being: crypto deposits complicate exclusions. If you’re using BTC/LTC/ETH for speed, plan for manual wallet-level blocks and make sure the operator documents your exclusion request in writing.
Honestly? In my experience the best plan combines legal enforcement, payment blocking, and specialist support. Use these criteria when choosing:
Next I’ll unpack the payment rails — because without that part, self-exclusion is often half measure at best.
POLi, Visa / Mastercard, and e‑wallets (Skrill / Neteller) are the most common rails Kiwi players use. POLi is huge here and often the fastest way to deposit NZ$20–NZ$500, so blocking POLi on your bank app is a big win. Contact your bank — ANZ New Zealand, ASB, BNZ, Kiwibank — and ask them to place a merchant block on gambling merchants. This doesn’t always stop crypto, of course, but it blocks most fiat routes.
For Visa/Mastercard: cancel stored card details in accounts and request your bank to flag gambling merchants. For e‑wallets: remove linked cards, close the wallet account, and keep copies of closure confirmations. If you use Apple Pay, remove the cards from the wallet entirely — it’s surprisingly easy to forget.
These mistakes are easy to make when you’re in a hurry, so set aside 20–30 minutes to do the paperwork properly and involve a support person if it feels overwhelming.
Look, offshore NZ-friendly casinos vary a lot in how they treat self-exclusion. Some sites provide strong account closure, documented KYC, and will ban your payment details; others simply disable login and leave payment rails active. If you play offshore, check the operator’s responsible-gaming page and test their support by requesting a self-exclusion and watching how they respond. For Kiwi players, it’s sensible to choose operators with clear, documented processes and 24/7 support — that makes escalation easier if they don’t follow through.
For example, when I tested a few NZ-friendly operators, the speed of support and clarity of KYC requests were the differentiators. If the operator offered instant live chat and a written confirmation within the hour I considered them reliable; if they took days, I treated that as a red flag. As a practical tip, keep a copy of the message thread and ask for the exclusion reference number — it helps if you later contact the regulator.
Not gonna lie — many Kiwi players value instant payouts and crypto rails, and that can make offshore sites attractive. If you’re considering a site that markets to NZ players, check whether they explicitly support NZD, POLi deposits, and NZ-focused customer service hours. I often test operator support by asking for self-exclusion policies and verifying response times; solid platforms will provide clear steps and confirm exclusions via email.
If you want a quick look at an NZ-facing operator’s responsible gaming and support, consider checking reputable NZ-oriented listings and verified brand pages such as brango-casino-new-zealand which summarise local payment options and support availability for Kiwi players. For players focused on crypto-first options, also verify whether the operator will accept wallet-address exclusion requests — that’s crucial for making exclusions meaningful when using Bitcoin or Litecoin.
Another resource for comparative checks is the operator’s support responsiveness during NZ business hours — if they answer quickly, you’re in a better position should you need to escalate a self-exclusion request or request account deletion.
A: Yes — you can request exclusion from any operator that accepts you. Legal enforcement differs: DIA-backed exclusions apply to NZ venues; offshore exclusions depend on the operator’s policies and payment restrictions.
A: Not automatically. You must ask the operator to ban wallet addresses and consider moving crypto to cold storage or deleting hot-wallets to prevent impulse deposits.
A: Escalate in writing, keep timestamps, and use public watchdogs or forums. For local venues, contact DIA or the Gambling Commission. For offshore, lodge complaints with the operator’s license regulator and use NZ support services.
The answers above should clear the main confusion points; next I wrap up with practical next steps and resources.
Follow those steps and you’re far more likely to stick to the exclusion; combine them with support services for the best outcome.
18+ only. If gambling is causing harm, call Gambling Helpline NZ on 0800 654 655 or the Problem Gambling Foundation on 0800 664 262. This article does not replace professional counselling.
Sources: Department of Internal Affairs (dia.govt.nz), Gambling Commission (gamblingcommission.govt.nz), Gambling Helpline NZ (gamblinghelpline.co.nz), Problem Gambling Foundation (pgf.nz), industry testing of operator support and payment rails (personal testing, 2024–2025).
About the Author: Jessica Turner — Kiwi gambling writer and data tester. I’ve run deposit/withdrawal tests across POLi, Visa/Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller and crypto rails, and I’ve worked with players on self-exclusion plans across Auckland, Wellington and rural Waikato. I write from experience, not theory; if you want a sanity check on a plan, ping my inbox and I’ll help where I can.
For comparative operator checks and NZ-focused summaries you can browse platform pages such as brango-casino-new-zealand which list NZ payment methods, support hours and responsible gaming tools; another quick reference is the operator’s responsible-gaming page which should state KYC, cooling-off and self-exclusion procedures in plain language. If you need an alternative reference, check NZ regulator pages next.
Final note: Not gonna lie — taking the exclusion step felt like admitting defeat the first time I did it. But in hindsight it was the smartest, most boring choice I made for my family and my finances. If you’re on the fence, do the checklist now and loop in support; you’ll thank yourself later.