The bonus selection problem isn't a CRM problem or a campaign problem. It's a widget problem, and it's solvable at the widget level.
FIFA World Cup 2026 is the biggest player acquisition window — and every sports betting operator knows it. Budgets are being planned, campaigns are being built, and World Cup offerings are being sharpened. But there's a step in the acquisition funnel that most operators underinvest in: what happens at the moment of deposit.
Players arrive from a landing page, a creative, or a registration flow with a specific bonus in mind. Then they open the payment widget, and the experience breaks down. The bonus they expected isn't selectable. There's only one on offer, and it's not the one they want. The fix requires leaving the widget, navigating to the promo lobby, canceling a bonus, selecting a different one, and coming back. By that point, a meaningful share of players have already left.
This is the problem that bonus selection in the payment widget solves — and it's worth understanding in detail, because the World Cup is coming, and first-time deposit (FTD) conversion is going to be the number that defines how well your acquisition spend performs.
Most operators focus their bonus strategy on two places: the CRM and the campaign. They build segmented offers, design compelling creatives, and set up registration flows with attractive welcome bonuses. That work matters. But the deposit moment — the widget itself — is often left out of the equation.
Here's what typically happens:Â
The result is predictable: drop-off. Some players abandon the deposit entirely. Others go to support — "Where are my bonuses?" is one of the most common cashier-related support queries operators see. Every one of those tickets represents a player who almost converted.
The irony is that this conversion friction happens at peak intent. The player has registered. They've seen the offer. They've opened the widget. They're one step away from depositing. Losing them here is the most expensive place in the funnel to lose anyone.
The bonus selection problem isn't a CRM problem or a campaign problem. It's a widget problem, and it's solvable at the widget level.
When full bonus selection is available inside the payment widget, the dynamic changes substantially. Players see all their bonuses in one place, can compare offers, switch between them, or choose to deposit without a bonus, without leaving the cashier at all.
The pre-selected bonus, whether it came from a landing page or a registration flow, remains the default. So operators who've built a specific campaign journey don't lose that continuity. The player sees exactly what was promised, confirmed in context, right before they deposit. But now they also have the option to change their mind without friction.
That optionality matters more than it might seem. Not every player wants the same bonus. A high-value player who already has a large balance might prefer to deposit without a bonus. A new player choosing between a 50% match on a small amount and a 100% match that requires a higher minimum deposit needs to see both to make an informed decision. Giving them that view inside the widget rather than sending them elsewhere keeps them in the conversion flow.
There's also a less obvious benefit: the "deposit without bonus" option. Removing the implicit pressure of having a bonus pre-applied reduces abandonment among players who are uncertain or who simply don't want the terms attached. It sounds counterintuitive to give players an easy way to skip the bonus, but the alternative is that they skip the deposit entirely. And from the operator's side, the option has a different kind of value: players who choose to deposit without a bonus represent pure revenue, with no promotional spend attached. That's a meaningful cost offset, especially for operators running aggressive bonus campaigns at scale.
We don’t have a benchmark yet for how full bonus selection affects FTD conversion — the feature is new, and real-world data takes time to accumulate. But there's an adjacent data point worth examining.
When we introduced bonus value display in the deposit amount field — showing the player in real time what bonus they'd receive at each deposit amount — we saw interaction with higher-value deposit amounts grow by 10-50% on new brands. These were brands without an established player base, where users hadn't yet formed habits around deposit sizes.
The mechanism is the same: make the bonus more visible and more tangible at the exact moment of the deposit decision, and players respond by engaging more actively with that decision. Full bonus selection takes that principle further. It doesn't just show the value of one offer — it lets players engage with their full range of options, and it does so without breaking the checkout flow.
During the World Cup, you're not just trying to retain existing players — you're competing for new ones in a market where every operator is running offers. Players shop bonuses. They'll register with whoever has the most compelling offer, and they'll deposit with whoever makes that offer feel real and accessible when they're ready to commit.
Operators entering new markets during the tournament, or trying to take share from incumbents, have always used bonuses as their primary lever: larger welcome matches, free bet packages, deposit multipliers tied to specific matches. The question here is whether the deposit experience can deliver on what the campaign promised.
Bonus selection in the widget closes that loop. A player who clicks a World Cup landing page offering a 150% match, registers, and arrives in the cashier to see that exact offer pre-selected — with the option to see other available bonuses alongside it — is getting a consistent, confidence-building experience. The promise made in the campaign is confirmed at the moment of the deposit. That consistency is a conversion driver.
There's also a timing dimension. New players have no established deposit habits. They haven't formed a routine around how much they typically deposit or which payment method they prefer. The widget experience shapes those early decisions. If the bonus mechanics are clear, the options are visible, and the flow is frictionless, first deposits tend to be larger. And players who make a satisfying first deposit are more likely to return.
The competitive context reinforces urgency. Bonus selection at the widget level is already standard across major markets — Asia, Europe, Turkey, MENA, and beyond. Operators who've benchmarked their cashier experience against competitors in these regions will recognize the gap. Running a World Cup campaign without this capability means a structurally weaker conversion funnel during the most competitive acquisition window of the year.
The feature is designed to be shaped by operators, not just switched on. Configuration happens through Journey Builder on the CRM side, and the options are broad enough to support meaningfully different bonus systems for sportsbook operators.
Each bonus can carry a custom image, name, description, and a note on the minimum deposit required to activate it. That means the widget becomes a branded surface — operators can use naming conventions and visuals to communicate the value of each offer clearly, rather than relying on generic labels. For a World Cup campaign, that might mean a banner that reads "World Cup Welcome: 150% Match" rather than a default bonus ID.
Making bonuses more visible at the deposit moment drives behavior — not just satisfaction. When players can see and act on their options in the widget, deposit amounts and conversion both move.
Bonuses can be assigned to specific payment methods rather than applied globally across the cashier. An operator who wants to incentivize deposits via a preferred method — say, a higher match bonus for card payments over e-wallets — can configure that directly. Players will see a bonus banner at the top of the widget, and the payment methods that carry a specific bonus are labelled "Get a bonus!". It makes the incentive visible at the moment of method selection, not just at checkout.
Operators running multi-wallet projects can configure a separate bonus setup for each currency. For operators active across multiple markets during the World Cup, this means each player sees bonus offers appropriate to their currency — no cross-currency confusion, no offers denominated in the wrong unit.
Depending on CRM setup, bonuses can display in the selection list with name and image only; with name, image, and calculated bonus value shown live in the deposit amount field; or with name, image, and minimum deposit information. A custom description can also be shown while the player browses the bonus list. Once they select a bonus, the widget displays it without the description, keeping the checkout view clean.Â
The richest presentation, with live value calculation in the deposit field, gives players the clearest signal of what they stand to gain at each deposit level, and it's the format most directly tied to higher deposit amounts.
For free bet offers, the widget surfaces the offer through the bonus name and banner; the value communication happens through naming and copy rather than a live fiat calculation.
The operators who perform best during major tournaments aren't necessarily those with the biggest budgets — they're those who've built the payment infrastructure and acquisition tools that convert. Landing pages, campaigns, and CRM offers are the top of the funnel. The widget is at the bottom. If the bottom leaks, the budget spent at the top doesn't fully pay off.
Bonus selection in the payment widget is one of the most direct levers for deposit conversion optimization available at that final step. It's worth configuring before the tournament, because first-time depositor behavior during a World Cup tends to set the baseline for retention and LTV in the months that follow.
If you're building your World Cup acquisition strategy now and want to understand how to configure bonus selection for your specific market and player mix, the GR8 Tech Payments Team is available to walk through your setup ahead of the tournament.
Talk to the GR8 Tech experts about configuring Bonus Selection for your sportsbook platform — and get the acquisition infrastructure in place before the tournament begins.
Talk detailsThe deposit moment is where most FTD conversion is won or lost — and it's the part of the funnel operators tend to underinvest in. A high-converting payment widget reduces the gap between what a player was promised in a campaign and what they actually experience when they go to deposit. For World Cup 2026, that means ensuring bonus offers are visible, selectable, and clearly communicated inside the widget itself — not buried in a promo lobby the player has to navigate separately.
When the widget confirms the campaign promise at the moment of deposit, players follow through. When it doesn't, they drop off. The operators who close that gap before the tournament will convert a meaningfully larger share of the traffic their World Cup campaigns generate.
A high-converting payment widget does a few things well.
First, it loads fast and presents payment options clearly — friction at the method selection stage costs conversions before a player even gets to the deposit amount — and checkout optimization in iGaming starts exactly there.
Second, it surfaces bonus offers in context, so players can see what they stand to gain from a specific deposit without leaving the cashier.
Third, it shows bonus value dynamically as the player adjusts their deposit amount — we've seen this alone drive a 10–50% increase in engagement with higher deposit tiers on new brands.
Fourth, it handles multi-currency and localized payment methods without forcing the player to make sense of offers denominated in the wrong unit or through an unfamiliar method.
Put together, these elements make the deposit experience feel intentional — and that's where real conversion optimization happens.
Players deposit through methods they trust, and trust is deeply local. A player in Turkey expects different options than one in Brazil or Japan — and if the payment widget doesn't surface the right methods for their market, the deposit success rate will reflect that. Localization isn't just about offering the right methods; it's about configuring bonuses per currency and per payment method so the player sees a coherent offer regardless of how they choose to deposit.
For online betting operators running multi-wallet projects across several markets during the World Cup, this means each player should encounter a widget that feels built for them — right currency, right methods, relevant bonus. The operators who get this right will see higher deposit completion rates in each market, not just in aggregate.
The payment widget is the last thing a player sees before they deposit, which makes it the most valuable place to reinforce a bonus offer. Dynamic bonus selection lets sportsbook operators surface all of a player's active bonuses inside the widget, with the campaign bonus pre-selected and clearly presented. Players can see the minimum deposit required, the value they'll receive, and their full range of options without leaving the cashier. For first-time depositors specifically, this visibility shapes behavior: when players can see that depositing $100 earns them a $150 bonus, they're more likely to hit that threshold than if the bonus terms are buried elsewhere.
Operators can also assign specific bonuses to specific payment methods — incentivizing preferred deposit routes — and configure custom images and copy through Journey Builder to make each offer feel like part of a coherent campaign rather than a system default.
The most direct indicator is FTD conversion rate — the share of registrations that result in a completed first deposit. Beyond that, the average first deposit size tells you whether the widget is influencing how much players commit, not just whether they commit. Bonus uptake rate matters too: if players are consistently skipping bonuses or abandoning after seeing them, something in the offer presentation isn't working. Support ticket volume related to the cashier — particularly "where is my bonus?" queries — is a useful indirect signal; a well-configured widget reduces this friction before it reaches support.
For ongoing payment optimization, track deposit completion rate by payment method to identify where drop-off is highest, and monitor deposit amounts by bonus type to understand which offers drive the most valuable first-time depositor behavior.
These KPIs together give major sports betting operators the data they need to make data-driven decisions about where the deposit funnel is performing and where it needs attention.
Responsible gambling requirements vary significantly by market, and the payment widget sits at a point in the player journey where several of them apply directly. Deposit limits, cooling-off periods, and self-exclusion checks all need to be handled at the cashier level — a widget that isn't integrated with the platform's responsible gambling controls creates both compliance risk and a poor player experience. The "deposit without bonus" option is also relevant here: giving players a genuine choice about whether to apply a bonus removes a layer of implicit pressure that regulators in several markets are increasingly scrutinizing.
For betting operators preparing for World Cup 2026 across multiple regulated markets, ensuring the widget is fully integrated with responsible gambling tooling — and that it surfaces these options clearly rather than hiding them — is as much a compliance task as a UX one.
The widget's impact on revenue is most visible at two points: acquisition and retention.
At acquisition, a well-optimized deposit flow converts a higher share of registrations into first deposits, and those first deposits tend to be larger when bonus value is clearly presented at the moment of decision.
At retention, players who have a smooth first deposit experience are more likely to return and deposit again, which is the foundation of LTV.
Across a major acquisition event like the World Cup, even a modest improvement in FTD conversion rate compounds quickly when applied to the volume of new registrations a well-run campaign generates.
The widget is also where bonus spend efficiency is determined: operators who give players genuine bonus choice — including the option to deposit without one — reduce wasted promotional spend on players who would have deposited regardless. That's revenue optimization at the point where it's hardest to see but easiest to measure.
Operators looking for the best payment widget for sportsbook use cases should ask one question: does it actively support conversion, or does it just process transactions?
A basic payment widget processes transactions. A modern one is an active part of the acquisition and retention funnel. The difference shows up in several places. Bonus integration is the most obvious: a modern widget surfaces active bonus offers, displays their value dynamically as the player adjusts their deposit amount, and lets the player choose or decline — all without leaving the cashier. Multi-currency support with per-currency bonus configuration is another differentiator, particularly for sportsbook operators active across multiple markets. So is payment method targeting: the ability to assign specific bonuses to specific deposit methods, rather than applying a single offer globally. At the payment widget configuration layer, modern sportsbook software for operators gives branded control — custom images, names, descriptions, and minimum deposit display — through tools like Journey Builder, rather than relying on system defaults. Together, these features turn the widget from a checkout page into a conversion surface.
The World Cup acquisition window is short and competitive — operators who arrive at it with unresolved widget friction will feel that in their FTD numbers.
Preparation means a few concrete things. First, audit the current deposit experience: does the widget confirm the bonus offer a player saw in your campaign? Can players see and select between their active bonuses? If not, that gap needs closing before the tournament.
Second, configure bonus presentation properly — custom images, names, minimum deposit thresholds, and per-method bonus targeting all affect how compelling the deposit moment feels.
Third, ensure your widget is localized for each target market: right payment methods, right currency, right bonus set.
Finally, set up the KPIs now so you can measure what's working during the tournament and adjust quickly. The operators who will perform best during World Cup 2026 aren't necessarily those with the biggest campaign budgets — they're those whose deposit flow can deliver on what their campaigns promise.