Zingo Bingo is SkillOnNet’s answer to the bingo question. While its sister site, Genting Casino, leads with casino and skips bingo entirely, Zingo flips the script and puts a proper Playtech bingo lobby front and centre.
Better still, it brings exclusive rooms you can’t play anywhere else, four of them, and pairs them with a 10 free spins no deposit bonus on Fire Joker.
We’ve scored it 4.3/5. It’s a strong effort for a new bingo site.
Zingo Bingo Key Facts
| Site Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| No Deposit Bonus: | 10 free spins on Fire Joker |
| Welcome Offer: | Multiple options including 360 free bingo tickets, 50 free spins or a 100% match up to £20 |
| Bonus Codes: | BASS50 (50 free spins on Big Bass Bonanza on a £10 deposit) |
| Minimum Deposit: | £10 |
| Minimum Withdrawal: | £10 |
| Bingo Software: | Playtech Virtue Fusion |
| Established: | 2025 relaunch |
| Operator: | SkillOnNet Ltd |
| Email Address: | support@zingobingo.co.uk |
| Live Chat: | Yes |
| Mobile App: | No, browser only |
Welcome Offers
Zingo is unusual in offering four ways in, and you pick the one that suits how you like to play. Our pick to start with is the one that costs nothing.
The flagship is a no deposit offer of 10 free spins on Fire Joker, each spin worth 5p, with a £100 cap on what you can win and withdraw. Sign up, no payment needed, and the spins land. You can claim this first, then decide on a deposit offer after if you want.
Three deposit-based alternatives sit alongside it for when you’re ready to put cash down. There are 360 free bingo tickets for a £10 spend, a 100% match bonus up to £20 for a £10 deposit, or 50 free spins on Big Bass Bonanza using the code BASS50. You can only claim one of the deposit deals, so it’s worth a quick look at which fits how you play before committing your tenner.
We would choose the Big Bass spins because it comes with no additional wagering requirements, so you get to keep what you win, but the choice is yours.
Bonus Wagering
Wagering is where Zingo is broadly fair, though not remarkable. The 50-spin Big Bass Bonanza welcome is the standout, with no wagering at all on what the spins win, which is still rare in UK bingo. The other three routes carry conditions, but kinder ones than most casino welcome offers.
The no deposit Fire Joker spins carry 10x wagering on any winnings, which is the standard lower-end figure on no deposit spins across UK bingo. The 100% match bonus runs at 5x bingo wagering, on the kinder side of casino deposit matches. The 360 free tickets aren’t wagered as such, only time-limited to 48 hours, so the only constraint there is using them inside the window.
Across all four routes, the maximum-conversion caps are the only real ceiling on what reaches your cash balance, and they vary by offer. Worth reading the bonus policy on the offer page before opting in because each offer may have individual terms that apply, and of course, they are subject to change.
Promo Codes
There’s one welcome code in play: BASS50. Apply it to a qualifying first deposit (£10 minimum) and the standard offer flips to 50 free spins on Big Bass Bonanza. The other welcome routes don’t need a code; you just opt in through the cashier.
For existing players, ongoing promotions and bonuses are typically opt-in rather than code-driven, though specific deals occasionally require a promo code published on the promotions page. Glance at it before you fund the account, and you’ll see which codes are live that day.
First Impressions
Zingo lands with a slick, modern look. The branding leans into a nostalgic pop-culture theme, with the site copy nodding to everything from the swinging 60s to the glittering 2000s, and the visuals carry the colour and energy you’d hope for. It’s clean, easy to scan and works well across desktop and mobile. The modern theme and retro styling itself is an interesting juxtaposition; you wouldn’t think it would work, but it does.
The one thing the design can’t paper over is the brand name itself. Zingo as a marketing handle is a touch generic for a sector that lives or dies on personality. We’ll give it a pass because what lies beneath the styling more than compensates, but the name doesn’t do the rest of the work any favours.
Navigation is where the site shows its experience. Bingo, casino, slots, live and Slingo each have their own routes, and the menus stay clear without dumping every option on one screen. A welcome change from the everything-in-the-lobby style some rivals still default to.
Bonuses and Promotions
What’s running on the bingo side at Zingo changes regularly, so anything listed below could be different by the time you read this. The site’s own promotions page carries the current set.
- Daily Dazzle – a £5,000 prize pool every day at 9 PM
- Disco Inferno – over £11,000 in daily payouts across themed rooms
- Monthly Mega Groove – a guaranteed £100,000 prize pool on the first Friday of every month
- Cash Cubes Bingo – an instant-win variant with a rolling jackpot, open 24/7
- Drops and Wins – the network-wide Pragmatic Play slot tournaments with weekly leaderboards
- Friday Bingo Hour and Super Saturdays – recurring weekly bingo specials with bumped prize pools
There’s a Levels loyalty programme running beneath everything, shared with other SkillOnNet sites. Tickets and wagers move you through tiers you can never drop back from, and the perks scale with your position. It’s a quiet, slow-burn rewards system rather than a flashy one, but it does mean regulars get recognised.
Exclusive Bingo Rooms
The single thing that lifts Zingo Bingo above the run of the SkillOnNet stable, and above most Playtech licensees full stop, is the rooms it owns outright. Four in particular are Zingo’s alone:
Newbie Room is the standout. Free tickets every day from 11am to noon and 5pm to 6pm, plus a 9am to 10am Sunday slot, available to new accounts for ten days from registration once you’ve placed any £1 bingo wager. The games pay real cash with a £2 top prize, not bonus funds, which is the right way to do free bingo. A real reason to claim the no deposit offer and stay on after the spins are gone.
Zingo Beats runs a disco-themed 5p ticket room with a £4 main prize and a £500-ish progressive jackpot ticking over the top. It also carries a Last Chance Saloon mini-game that hands a bonus to players who buy six or more tickets and don’t hit a line or full house, which softens the losing nights.
Millennium Mix packages three bingo formats into a single two-hour evening slot, riding a Nintendo Switch and emoji aesthetic that lands somewhere between fun and on-the-nose. 5p tickets, £5 main prizes, £500 progressive.
Bingomania is the marquee exclusive. Comic-book branding, 10p tickets, a £320 main prize and a £544 progressive at the time we looked. More telling than any of that, the room already showed 345 players waiting for it to kick off, which speaks to the community Zingo has been able to pull together in the short time since the SkillOnNet relaunch.
Exclusive rooms are the headline difference between Zingo and the rest of the Playtech-powered field. Most licensees of the network run only the shared rooms and never carry their own. Zingo doing both gives it a reason to recommend over a comparable rival on the same software.
Bingo Rooms and Games
Outside the exclusives, the rest of the lobby pulls from Playtech’s Virtue Fusion network. Around 15 rooms in total once everything’s running, covering 75-ball, 80-ball and 90-ball formats.
The network classics are here in force. Age of the Gods Bingo, Deal or No Deal Bingo across two rooms with progressive jackpots, Retro Grid 75, Electric 80s and a Penny Arcade that lets you buy in from 2p. Across the lobby the buy-in range runs from 2p up to 10p, so even the bigger rooms keep things affordable.
About twenty video bingo titles fill out the picture for anyone after a single-player twist on the format. The pick of them includes Tome of Madness Bingo, Crazy Monkey Banana Kingdom, The Green Machine Bingo and Thunderstruck II Video Bingo.
Slots and Casino
The slots library is enormous, well past 6,000 titles, with one of the better Megaways selections we’ve looked at in this segment. Standouts include Eye of Horus Megaways, Who Wants To Be A Millionaire Megaways, Buffalo King Megaways, Book of Dead and Rich Wilde’s back catalogue. Studios cover the major names, Play’n GO, NetEnt, Pragmatic Play, Yggdrasil and Games Global among them, with the Jackpot King progressive network in the mix.
The live casino does more than tick a box. Over 200 tables from Evolution, Playtech and Pragmatic Play, the full set of roulette and blackjack variants, baccarat, poker, sic bo, and the now-standard suite of live game shows including Monopoly Live, Crazy Time, Sweet Bonanza Candyland and Adventures Beyond Wonderland. There’s a Slingo section too, and a decent run of penny slots for low-stakes spinning.
Game Preview


Mobile App
There’s no native app for either iOS or Android. Zingo runs in your mobile browser instead, built on HTML5, and the experience is fast enough that you stop missing the app fairly quickly. Pages load briskly, the lobby reshapes well for smaller screens, and live dealer streams render cleanly.
The full set of features carries across to mobile. Every bingo room, every slot, the cashier, the loyalty area and the chat box are all reachable from the menu. If you fancy a home-screen icon, save the site to your phone and you’ll have a shortcut that behaves like an app, without ever opening the App Store. This is called a ‘progressive web app’, but it’s essentially the normal site in a wrapper, which you can save to your phone’s icons.
Signup and Login
Joining is a five-minute job. The registration form asks for the standard contact details plus a password, and the account opens as soon as you submit.
Identity verification has to clear before you can take money out. Zingo will ask for ID and an address document during the process, which is standard UK practice and routine if your registration details match. On return visits the Zingo Bingo login is in the header at the top of every page.
Deposit Options
The cashier is on the lean side compared with some rivals, but the methods on it are the ones most UK players actually use:
All methods sit at a £10 floor, deposits and withdrawals alike. The notable absences are e-wallets such as Skrill, Neteller, and EcoPayz, as well as prepaid options like Paysafecard. Whether that matters depends on how you pay.
Where Zingo scores back the points it lost on payment breadth is the cost. Every transaction is fee-free, deposits and withdrawals alike, which is more than most of the Playtech-network rivals can say. Withdrawal requests are reviewed inside 24 hours, then the wait depends on your method. PayPal and Trustly typically land same-day, debit cards and bank transfers take a few business days. Apple Pay isn’t an option on the way out, so debit cards or PayPal are the usual return route.
Licensing and Regulation
The company behind Zingo is SkillOnNet Limited, a long-established Maltese operator running a large estate of UK casino brands regulated by the UK Gambling Commission. Zingo trades under UKGC account 39326, which sits behind a wider stable of sister sites including Genting Casino, Mega Casino, Prime Casino, Lord Ping and Ice36.
One detail that’s worth giving Zingo credit for is naming the testing lab. The site is upfront about using iTech Labs for RNG audits, where plenty of sites leave you to assume. Combined with SSL across the platform, segregated player funds, a clear privacy policy and a dual licence with the Malta Gaming Authority, the trust picture is solid.
Responsible-gambling controls live in the account area, covering freeze and cooling-off windows from a day up to six weeks, deposit caps on daily, weekly or monthly cycles, reality-check notifications, and self-exclusion of up to five years through GamStop.
Support is reached through live chat or email at support@zingobingo.co.uk. The chat runs 6am to midnight GMT, which covers the bulk of player activity but isn’t the 24/7 service some bigger UK sites offer. There’s no phone line. For most everyday issues the chat is fast, and the help centre answers the routine deposit, bonus and account queries on its own.
Sister Sites
Zingo belongs to a sizeable SkillOnNet family of UK brands, but it’s the odd one out in the most useful way for a bingo player. The other SkillOnNet sites in the stable, Genting Casino, Prime Casino, Spin Genie, Mega Casino, Lord Ping and Ice36, are all casino-led and don’t carry real bingo at all.
That makes Zingo the obvious port of call within the group for anyone who wants the SkillOnNet stack, the same cashier and Levels loyalty programme, but with a proper bingo product attached. Across the wider operator portfolio, the picture is much the same, with bingo-flagship brands rare across the group. So if you like what you see on Genting or one of the others and miss having bingo, Zingo is the answer the operator already built.
Review Conclusion
Pros
- No wagering on the the 50 free spin Big Bass Bonanza offer
Four exclusive bingo rooms (Newbie Room, Zingo Beats, Millennium Mix, Bingomania)
Newbie Room runs free real-cash games daily for 10 days
Playtech Virtue Fusion bingo plus 6,000+ slots, 200+ live tables and 40+ game shows
Fully fee-free deposits and withdrawals, with iTech Labs RNG transparency
Cons
- Some bonuses have maximum win caps (not ideal, but we understand why some do, for example, the no deposit promo needs wagering requirements and a win cap to not bankrupt the site!).
No native iOS or Android app
The payment menu is functional but lacks some e-wallets like Skrill, Neteller and Paysafecard
Bingotastic Score
Zingo Bingo is one of the better new arrivals to UK bingo in a long time, and it’s easily the most interesting site SkillOnNet has launched.
The exclusive rooms are the headline. In a Playtech market where most licensees take only the shared network rooms, Zingo built four of its own and put them at the front of the lobby. Add a the no deposit welcome offer, three other deposit bonuses, a no-wagering structure on the spin offers, fee-free banking and iTech Labs transparency, and the basics are stronger than almost anything else in the segment.
The thin patches are real but minor. Live chat ends at midnight, the payment list could use a couple of e-wallets, and there’s no native app. The branding is a touch generic. None of it changes the substance of what’s on offer. It’s good in our opinion.
That nets out at 4.3/5. Not quite top-tier yet, because the best UK bingo brands have community depth, app polish and round-the-clock support that Zingo hasn’t fully built yet. For a brand-new SkillOnNet relaunch, though, this is an excellent debut, and the easiest recommendation across the operator’s stable if bingo is what you’re after. Overall, it’s a massive improvement over their previous operation as a Jumpman Gaming white-label; as such, we commend them for their effort.
