High-Risk Merchant Accounts for iGaming and Forex Operators
Boldrails is a licensed high-risk merchant account provider. We open a collection and settlement account that accepts cards, bank transfers and crypto for iGaming, forex and other high-risk businesses, then settle to your bank or wallet in minutes, not T+2. We serve high-volume merchants worldwide, with onboarding in 3 to 14 days, depending on your case.
- Cards, bank transfer and crypto on one account
- Settlement in minutes, not T+2
- No standard rolling reserve
- Onboarding in 3 to 14 days
Last updated: 2026-07-06
High-risk merchant accounts
What is a high-risk merchant account?
A high-risk merchant account is a card-accepting account for a business that an acquiring bank or card network classifies as higher-risk. That label comes from elevated chargebacks, a regulated industry, card-not-present sales, high average tickets, or international volume. A four-digit merchant category code (MCC) sets the risk level and the fees.
Common high-risk MCCs cover online gaming, forex and CFD trading, crypto, subscriptions, and adult content. A single card-not-present forex deposit or an iGaming top-up is a textbook high-risk transaction: the cardholder is remote, the ticket is large, and the dispute rate runs high.
Boldrails provides this account directly. We hold the licences and act as the principal, so you deal with one licensed provider, not a chain of intermediaries. If your business is lower-risk, our standard business accounts sit on the same banking and settlement platform.
The problem
Why iGaming and forex operators get declined or frozen
Aggregators like Stripe, PayPal and Square are built for low-risk merchants. They board fast, then freeze or terminate accounts that trip a risk threshold. Stripe's own policies allow reserves and fund holds of up to 180 days. For an operator mid-payout cycle, that is cash locked away, not a warning.
The rules keep tightening. Under Visa's Acquirer Monitoring Program (VAMP), acquirers scrutinize fraud and dispute ratios harder. Mastercard's MATCH list is a five-year database of terminated merchants that follows you between processors. iGaming and forex sit right in the crosshairs.
The problems below are what push operators to switch:
- Sudden account freezes and 180-day fund holds during peak volume.
- Termination after a chargeback spike, with no route back.
- A MATCH-list entry that blocks standard boarding elsewhere.
- Payout delays that starve working capital.
The fix is a dedicated account underwritten for your vertical from day one. We treat compliance as infrastructure that keeps the account open, not a switch that shuts it off.
How it works
How the Boldrails high-risk merchant account works
We run one platform for money in and money out. It works in four stages.
- 1
Collect
Take cards, bank transfers (ACH in the US, SEPA in the EU) and crypto, in multiple currencies, through our payment gateway.
- 2
Hold
Funds land in segregated multi-currency sub-accounts, kept separate by entity and currency.
- 3
Convert
Move balances into fiat or stablecoin at a locked rate when you choose.
- 4
Distribute
Settle to your bank or wallet and run mass payouts to players, affiliates or traders.
The difference operators notice first is speed. We settle in minutes, not the T+2 timeline standard high-risk accounts impose. One compliance layer covers collection and payout, so you are not stitching together a processor, a bank and a payout tool. This is the settlement engine at the core of our banking platform.
Fees and settlement
High-risk merchant account fees, reserves and settlement
High-risk processing costs more than a standard account, and the structure matters as much as the rate. Payments consultancies report typical high-risk pricing of 3.5% to 6.5% plus 20 to 35 cents per transaction, versus roughly 2.6% to 3.1% for low-risk aggregators. Most high-risk processors also hold a rolling reserve of 5% to 15% of volume for 3 to 6 months, released gradually.
The headline rate is only part of it. A gateway fee, a PCI fee, and a per-incident chargeback fee stack on top. Chargeback controls like 3D Secure and PSD2 SCA, AVS and CVV checks, and fraud scrubbing keep disputes down and protect the account.
| Standard aggregator | Typical high-risk processor | Boldrails | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Approval time | Instant, automated | 24 to 72 hours once docs are complete | Onboarding 3 to 14 days |
| Processing rate (MDR) | 2.6% to 3.1% + 10¢ | 3.5% to 6.5% + 20 to 35¢ | Quote-based by vertical and volume |
| Rolling reserve | None, but freezes | 5% to 15%, held 3 to 6 months | No standard rolling reserve |
| Settlement speed | T+1 to T+2 | T+1 to T+2, plus reserve delay | Minutes |
| Crypto rail | Limited | Rare | Yes |
| Mass payouts | Limited | No | Yes |
| Frozen-account risk | High, auto-freeze | Medium | Low |
Where you land in the high-risk range depends on your vertical, chargeback history, geography and settlement currency. Our own pricing is quote-based, set the same way. Tell us your numbers and we will price the account.
Sources: Visa; Mastercard
Who we accept
Who we accept: high-risk verticals
We build accounts for businesses that aggregators turn away. Acceptance is capability-level, confirmed for your specific market during onboarding.
iGaming
For licensed operators.
Forex and CFD brokers
Card-not-present deposits and international volume.
Crypto businesses
With high-risk crypto and OTC settlement and a crypto payment gateway.
High-ticket and subscription e-commerce
Recurring billing and large average tickets.
Who this is not for: unlicensed gambling operators and sanctioned businesses. We run real underwriting, so a clean, licensed operation is the baseline. If you hold the licence for your market, we can usually build you an account.
Licensing and compliance
Licensing and compliance: compliance as infrastructure
Boldrails is a licensed principal and holds the necessary licences required in the markets we serve. That is what lets us open and hold the account directly, rather than placing you with a third party.
The table below shows the regulatory framework we operate within, by market. It is market context, not a claim to any single named authorization.
| Market | The regulatory framework we operate within |
|---|---|
| EU | Payment-institution or e-money authorization under PSD2, supervised by the national competent authority |
| UK | Authorized payment institution, under the Financial Conduct Authority |
| US | Money transmission licensing and acquiring-bank-sponsored processing |
| Australia | Financial-services and remittance registration, under the national AML/CTF regulator |
| Canada | Money services business registration, under the national AML regulator |
Availability and onboarding depend on your jurisdiction, licence status and product type, and requirements differ by market. We confirm the framework that applies to you during onboarding.
The controls we run on every account include PCI DSS for card-data security, 3D Secure and PSD2 SCA for card verification, and full KYB, KYC, AML and sanctions screening at onboarding. These keep accounts open and boardable, which is the point.
Sources: European Banking Authority (PSD2); PCI Security Standards Council; UK Financial Conduct Authority
Get started
How to open a high-risk merchant account
Opening an account takes three steps.
- 1
Tell us your business
Share your vertical, monthly volume and target markets.
- 2
Complete KYB
Send company documents, processing history and ownership details.
- 3
Get approved and start settling
Once underwriting clears, you collect and settle on the platform.
Onboarding runs 3 to 14 days, depending on your case. Straightforward businesses in clear markets move fast; complex corridors or deeper compliance review take longer. "Instant approval" elsewhere usually means a fast intake form followed by the same underwriting. If you are on the MATCH list, we can often still board you, depending on the reason code and your documentation.
Get approved for a high-risk merchant account
Tell us your vertical, volume and target markets. We will underwrite the account and settle you in minutes, not T+2.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Last updated: 2026-07-06