Proof of Address for Rainbet — Accepted Documents
Updated on July 3, 2026 by the editorial team
Sooner or later Rainbet will ask you to confirm proof of address, and that request usually lands right before your first withdrawal. It sounds bureaucratic. In practice it comes down to one document that shows your name and your home address printed together, dated within the last three months. Get that part right and the whole check moves fast.
This page walks through what qualifies, where to pull the file from, how fresh it has to be, and the small mistakes that get an upload bounced back. Verification at Rainbet normally clears in 24-72 hours once the paperwork is clean.
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Understand what a valid address document actually shows
Two things must appear together on a single page: your full name and your residential address. That is the entire test. A statement with a redacted address, or a letter that only shows your name, fails on the spot.
The address on the file has to match what you entered during registration. If you moved and never updated your account, fix the account details first, then upload. Rainbet cross-checks the document against the profile, so a mismatch between a new address and an old registration triggers a manual review that adds days.
Dates matter too. Most accepted documents need to be no older than three months. A utility bill from last winter won't pass in mid-year. Keep the issue date visible and legible; cropping it out is one of the fastest ways to get a rejection.
One more thing worth checking before you upload: the document should be an official, third-party record. Something you typed yourself in a word processor carries no weight. It has to come from a bank, a utility company, a government body, or a comparable institution.
Why the fuss over a single bill? Proof of address confirms that the person betting from your account really lives where the account says they do. It protects the operator against fraud and it protects you against someone else using your identity. That's also why the check tends to appear right when money is about to leave the platform rather than at sign-up. The good news is that you complete it once. After Rainbet verifies your address, future withdrawals skip this step entirely unless your details change.
Track down a document you already have
You almost certainly own something that qualifies without ordering anything new. Start with your bank. A statement downloaded straight from online banking as a PDF, name and address on the header, dated this quarter — that's the cleanest option most players reach for.
No recent bank statement? Look at your utilities. Electricity, gas, water, or a home internet bill all work, provided they're addressed to you at the property on your account. Council rates notices and official government letters count as well, and Australian players often find these are the easiest to locate.
A quick way to gather one:
- Open your online banking or your utility provider's customer portal.
- Find the most recent statement or bill dated within the last 90 days.
- Download it as a full, uncropped PDF rather than a screenshot.
- Confirm your name, address, and the issue date are all readable on the same page.
- Save the file somewhere you can reach it from the device you'll upload with.
Photos of a paper bill are fine too. Lay it flat, use good light, capture all four corners. Blur and glare are the usual culprits behind a rejected image, so take a second shot if the first looks soft.
Compare accepted documents and their freshness rules
Not every document carries the same shelf life. Bank statements and utility bills reset every billing cycle, so the three-month window is easy to hit. Government-issued letters and tax notices sit on a slightly longer clock. The table below sums up what Rainbet takes and how recent each one has to be.
| Document | Accepted? | How recent | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank or credit card statement | Yes | Within 3 months | Full statement, not a single transaction slip |
| Utility bill (electricity, gas, water) | Yes | Within 3 months | Must be addressed to you at the property |
| Home internet or landline bill | Yes | Within 3 months | Mobile phone bills often not accepted |
| Council rates notice | Yes | Within 12 months | Common and reliable for AU players |
| Government or tax authority letter | Yes | Within 6-12 months | Official letterhead required |
| Tenancy or lease agreement | Sometimes | Current term | May need supporting proof; check with support |
| Handwritten or self-made letter | No | — | Not issued by a recognised institution |
Proof of address is only one piece of the wider check. Rainbet's full KYC set covers an ID card, passport or driver's licence, this address document, and proof that you own the payment method you used. You can read more about the whole flow on our why ID is required page, or jump straight to payment methods if you're setting up a withdrawal.
Avoid the mistakes that get an upload rejected
Most rejections aren't dramatic. They come from small, fixable details. Here are the ones that trip players up most often.
Expired dates. A document past the three-month window is the number one reason a proof of address bounces. Check the issue date before you send, not after.
Cropped or partial files. When you cut the image down to "just the important part", you often lose the letterhead, the date, or an edge of the address. Send the whole page.
Address mismatch. The name and address must line up with your Rainbet profile exactly. A middle initial on one and not the other, or an old suburb, can hold things up.
Poor image quality. Dark photos, glare across the paper, a thumb over the corner — the reviewer can't verify what they can't read. Retake it in daylight on a flat surface.
Wrong document type. Mobile phone bills, delivery receipts, and screenshots of a webpage frequently get knocked back. Stick to bank statements, utilities, and official notices.
Edited or altered files. Never touch up a document to "clean it up" before sending. Any sign that dates, names, or figures were changed voids the whole submission and can flag the account. Upload the original, untouched.
A tip that saves a round trip: before you hit send, open the file and read it as if you were the reviewer. Can you see the name? The full address? The issue date? The company or bank that produced it? If any one of those four answers is "not clearly", the check will stall. Fixing it now costs you two minutes. Fixing it after a rejection costs you a day or more.
If a first attempt fails, you don't lose your progress. Correct the specific issue and re-upload. Our guide on verification rejected reasons breaks down each knockback in more detail. Support runs live chat and email 24/7 if you'd rather confirm a document before sending it.
FAQ
How long does proof of address verification take at Rainbet?
Once your documents are uploaded and legible, the review usually completes within 24-72 hours. Clean, in-date files at the front of the queue tend to clear at the faster end of that range.
Can I use a mobile phone bill as proof of address?
Often no. Mobile bills are frequently declined because the billing address doesn't always tie to your residence. A fixed-line internet bill, a utility bill, or a bank statement is a safer bet.
Does the document have to be in my name?
Yes. Both your full name and your residential address must appear on the same page, and they need to match the details on your Rainbet account. A bill in a partner's or flatmate's name won't verify you.
Can I send a screenshot instead of a PDF or photo?
Screenshots of a webpage are usually rejected. Download the official PDF from your bank or provider, or take a clear photo of the paper document showing all four corners and the issue date.
What if my address recently changed?
Update your address in your Rainbet account first, then upload a document that shows the new address. Sending a document that doesn't match your registered details triggers a manual review and slows everything down. Rainbet operates under an Anjouan Gaming Authority licence, and consistent details across your profile keep the check straightforward.
