The visible VIP ladder changes two things first: payout room and reward value. The withdrawal range runs from €500 per day and €5,000 per month up to €2,000 per day and €20,000 per month, while higher-status cashback routes add stronger percentages and higher caps.
The labels are not presented in one single format everywhere. Cashback pages use named upper tiers such as Glacier, Blaze, and Supreme, while payout ceilings are shown through a numeric VIP 1-5 ladder.
Status is also not fixed permanently. The account is judged through the previous 90 days, and one month without active betting can move it back to the lowest level, so the useful question is not only what the current level gives, but also what keeps it there.
VIP status at LolaJack changes both reward value and payout capacity, not one without the other. That is the first distinction to make before comparing the page with general promotions or with payout troubleshooting.
The visible payout spread already shows the practical side of the ladder, from €500 per day to €2,000 per day and from €5,000 per month to €20,000 per month. On the reward side, the checked cashback routes show 5%, 10%, and 15% on the casino route for the named higher tiers, while the live route shows 25% with separate caps.
The result is simple: a higher level is not only a loyalty badge. It changes how much can be moved out and how much value can return through cashback when the right game area and level conditions are met.
Withdrawal limits at LolaJack by VIP level are shown through a numeric ladder rather than through named cashback labels. That makes this block the right place to check whether the amount itself fits the visible room before treating the issue as a timing problem.
| VIP Level | Daily Limit | Monthly Limit |
|---|---|---|
| VIP 1 | €500 | €5,000 |
| VIP 2 | €500 | €5,000 |
| VIP 3 | €1,000 | €10,000 |
| VIP 4 | €1,500 | €15,000 |
| VIP 5 | €2,000 | €20,000 |
The table is a ceiling check, not a payout-speed promise. A request can stay inside the normal handling window and still be limited by the visible daily or monthly room tied to the current level.
That is why both ceilings matter together. A reader can fit one request inside the daily limit and still run into the monthly cap through repeated payouts, so the safer comparison is not balance alone but balance against both visible thresholds.
Cashback at LolaJack is split by game area before it is split by cap. Daily Cashback applies to casino play, while Live Cashback applies to live-casino play, so they should not be treated as one flat reward line with different names.
Daily Cashback is shown for Glacier, Blaze, and Supreme at 5%, 10%, and 15%, with caps of €50, €150, and €250. The minimum cashback is €1, the release requirement is 1x, and the checked credit time is 04:00 UTC.
Live Cashback works on a weekly route instead. It shows a 25% rate on the visible upper tiers, with caps of €100, €150, and €200, and the checked credit point is Monday rather than the daily cycle used on the casino side.
The VIP program at LolaJack is tied to recent behaviour, not to one old result that stays in place forever. The checked logic looks at the previous 90 calendar days, which means current status is shaped by recent activity rather than by a distant peak.
That review is not limited to deposits alone. Deposit-to-withdrawal ratio and bonuses received are also part of the level logic, so the visible status should be read as a combined output rather than as a single-money metric.
The strongest downgrade signal is inactivity. One month without active betting can move the account back to the lowest level, which explains why a visible drop after a quiet period is not automatically a support error.
The page labels are not meant to do exactly the same job everywhere. Numeric levels such as VIP 1 to VIP 5 are used for payout ceilings, while named tiers such as Glacier, Blaze, and Supreme appear on cashback pages, so the wording can look different even when both belong to the VIP system.
The useful rule is to read each label in the context where it appears. A payout-limit page is answering a ceiling question, while a cashback page is answering a reward question, so forcing a one-to-one wording match can create confusion where the site is actually separating two different outputs of the same status system.
That is why a named tier on a cashback page should not be treated as a missing numeric level, and a numeric payout level should not be treated as a missing cashback label. The two label sets are visible in different contexts because the page jobs are different.
This page is for VIP value: payout room, cashback routes, level movement, and the difference between numeric and named status labels. It is not the full place for choosing a first offer, comparing every promotion, or diagnosing a payout delay step by step.
When the real question is which welcome, reload, or cashback route fits the next deposit rather than how VIP value is structured, the bonus offers page is the better next step.
When the real issue is payout timing, pending requests, or the money path after the request is sent, the withdrawal rules page is the right place to continue.
The two clearest changes are payout room and cashback value. Higher visible levels increase daily and monthly withdrawal limits, and higher cashback routes can also unlock stronger percentages and caps.
No. The visible ladder runs from €500 per day and €5,000 per month at the lower levels up to €2,000 per day and €20,000 per month at the highest visible level.
Daily Cashback applies to casino play and is credited on a daily cycle, while Live Cashback applies to live-casino play and follows a weekly credit point on Monday.
The checked cashback pages use named higher tiers such as Glacier, Blaze, and Supreme rather than the numeric payout ladder.
Yes. One month without active betting can move the account back to the lowest level.
No. The checked logic also refers to the previous 90 days, deposit-to-withdrawal ratio, and bonuses received.
Move to bonuses when the real question is offer choice, and move to withdrawals when the real question is payout timing, pending requests, or cashout handling rather than VIP value itself.