Best Sites For The Rollback Method in 2026 — Full Ranking
3/8/2026
not every CS2 skin site is usable for this. some credit instantly, have proper case battles, and don’t check Steam after the fact — those are the ones on this list. the rest are on the avoid list either because they patched the reversal path or because they were never usable to begin with.
the complete ranking
| rank | site | instant credit? | case battles? | detects reversal? | post-reversal action | grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CSGO-Skins | ✅ yes | ✅ yes (full) | ❌ rarely | account ban (days later) | A+ |
| 2 | skin.club | ✅ yes | ✅ yes (full) | ⚠️ sometimes | negative balance on loser accounts | A |
| 3 | G4Skins | ✅ yes | ✅ yes (full) | ⚠️ delayed batch | account ban | B+ |
| 4 | Hellcase | ✅ yes | ✅ yes | ❌ no | nothing observed | B+ |
how I test each site
same process every time so the results are comparable:
- 4 Steam accounts, each deposits $200-300
- run a case battle between the 4 accounts with low-risk cases
- winning account withdraws the pool in skins
- losing accounts reverse their deposit trades on Steam on day 5-6
- watch all 4 site accounts for 2 weeks — any clawbacks? account bans? balance adjustments?
- repeat 3 times per site to confirm consistency
detailed breakdowns
#1: CSGO-Skins — the best overall
CSGO-Skins credits deposits instantly, has proper 1v1v1 and 1v1v1v1 case battles with a solid low-variance case selection, and their detection on reversed deposits is basically nonexistent. in 3 full cycles none of my losing accounts got a balance clawback, and the winning account’s withdrawal has stuck 100% of the time.
what happens after the battle + reversal:
- winning account’s withdrawal finalizes immediately, withdrawn skins are untouchable
- losing accounts keep a positive/zero balance — no clawback
- losing accounts may or may not get banned days later. doesn’t matter, nothing’s there.
- the site doesn’t seem to cross-check Steam trade state after the fact
best approach: winner withdraws within the same session. losers wait and reverse on day 5-6.
my results over 3 cycles (4 accounts each):
- 3/3 clean cycles
- 0 clawbacks on winning withdrawals
- 0 negative-balance events on losing accounts
- profit/cycle avg: +$840
#2: skin.club — premium feel, similar mechanics
skin.club has the best UX of the 4 and their case battle lobby fills fast. credit is instant, withdrawals are fast, detection is a bit more aware than CSGO-Skins — they sometimes flip losing accounts to negative balance after noticing the reversal. which is fine because the losers already played their role; their balance was zero when they left.
what happens after:
- winning withdrawal is final
- losing accounts go to negative balance after 2-5 days (~40% of the time)
- no skin clawback attempts
- account bans happen about 1-2 weeks later on losing accounts
best approach: same as CSGO-Skins. make sure losing accounts are at $0 balance before reversing — don’t leave funds to be frozen.
my results over 3 cycles:
- 3/3 fully profitable cycles
- 4 of 9 losing accounts went negative-balance (doesn’t affect outcome)
- winner withdrawals always stuck
- profit/cycle avg: +$800
#3: G4Skins — reliable but slower detection
G4Skins takes slightly longer on deposit credit (1-3 minutes) and their detection runs on a weekly batch — which is actually great for us. by the time they cross-check trade state, the cycle is long done.
what happens after:
- credit shows up 1-3 min post-trade
- winning withdrawal stays, no issues
- losing accounts typically stay active for 7-10 days, then get banned in the batch sweep
- no clawback on withdrawals ever observed
best approach: same flow, just don’t panic if the deposit takes 2 minutes to credit.
my results over 3 cycles:
- 3/3 profitable
- every losing account got banned eventually (all 9/9), but always after reversal was complete
- no lost funds
- profit/cycle avg: +$790
#4: Hellcase — the sleeper
Hellcase’s anti-fraud monitoring is basically nothing. every losing account from my cycles is still active a month later with no flags. case battles are available and work exactly like you’d expect.
what happens after:
- literally nothing
- balances unchanged, accounts unbanned
- no evidence they check Steam trade status at any point
best approach: reuse accounts here. you can run Hellcase cycles indefinitely with the same site accounts. just keep rotating Steam accounts for the reversals.
my results over 3 cycles:
- 3/3 clean cycles
- 0 bans across 9 losing accounts
- 0 detections
- profit/cycle avg: +$780
single-account numbers
if you’re running the single-account approach instead of case battles, the same 4 sites work. numbers from ~20 single sessions per site:
| site | win rate | avg profit (winning) | avg profit (reversed) | overall EV/session |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CSGO-Skins | 62% | +$190 | +$240 | +$208 |
| skin.club | 58% | +$175 | +$255 | +$209 |
| G4Skins | 55% | +$160 | +$230 | +$192 |
| Hellcase | 60% | +$150 | +$225 | +$180 |
the “winning” column is smaller than “reversed” because winning ends the cycle (you withdraw profit and leave). reversed sessions net more because you get your deposit back and the partial withdrawal.
cost per cycle
| resource | case battle cycle (4 acc) | single-account cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Steam accounts needed | 4 | 1 |
| mobile authenticator wait | already done | already done |
| VPN rotation | ~$10/mo | ~$10/mo |
| deposit skins | $1,200 (3/4 returned via reversal) | $300 (returned if reversed) |
| net fixed cost per cycle | ~$3 | ~$1 |
basically nothing relative to the payout.
recommended rotation
3 Steam accounts across 4 sites, 12 total:
| week | site | accounts |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | CSGO-Skins | A1-A4 |
| 2 | skin.club | B1-B4 |
| 3 | G4Skins | C1-C4 |
| 4 | Hellcase | A1-A4 (Hellcase doesn’t ban, safe to reuse) |
by week 5 the A1-A4 accounts are back out of their Steam ban if you used them in week 1. rotation runs continuously.
⚠️ sites that will NOT work
some sites patched this or never let it work to begin with. depositing on them = losing money. read Sites To Avoid before trying anything new. the big names on that list include Key-Drop, GGDrop, Casehug, and gocsgo — do not touch them.