I chose to stop depending on vague payout promises and ran a series of real-money withdrawal experiments at Fambet Casino from a Canadian residential IP address, using a thoroughly verified account financed with my personal cash. Over the course of three weeks, I transferred funds through Interac e-Transfer, Visa and Mastercard, Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ethereum, bank wire, and two e-wallet providers that are popular in the Canadian market. My goal was not to choose the fastest method and be done, but to measure the complete lifecycle of each transaction from the second I clicked the withdrawal button to the instant the money landed in my bank account, crypto wallet, or e-wallet. What I discovered was a payment system that is notably consistent, but also one where the rate of your initial cashout relies significantly on how quickly you pass the identity verification stage. This is the unvarnished, timestamped data from my evaluation, with all the waiting screens, pending periods, and weekend delays added.
Before I could send a single withdrawal request, I needed to complete Fambet Casino’s full know-your-customer workflow, which in Canada is a mandatory requirement for any licensed operator. I registered with my real name, a Canadian residential address in British Columbia, and a phone number linked to a Vancouver-area carrier. The initial deposit was a modest $50 via Interac e-Transfer, which landed in under four minutes and initiated an immediate request for identity documents. I provided a colour scan of my Canadian driver’s licence, a recent utility bill showing the same address, and a selfie holding the licence next to my face. The compliance team reviewed the package in just over seven hours, which is faster than the 24-to-48-hour window many competitors advertise. That quick verification turnaround defined the experience for everything that followed, because without it, no withdrawal timer even starts ticking.
I purposefully ran the tests across different days of the week, including a Saturday morning and a late Sunday evening, to see whether Fambet Casino’s back-office processing decreases outside Canadian banking hours. I also changed the withdrawal amounts. For e-transfer and crypto, I tested both small amounts under $100 and a larger single payout of $1,200. For card and bank wire, I held the amounts in the mid-three-figure range because those methods often have higher minimum thresholds. Every transaction was monitored with a screen recording that captured the exact time I initiated the request, the moment the status switched from pending to processed, and the final arrival notification from my bank or wallet app. This was not a theoretical exercise; I approached it as a performance audit of a payment system that Canadian players will actually use.
Interac e-Transfer is the backbone of Canadian online casino payments, and Fambet Casino clearly treats it as a priority channel. My first withdrawal was a $90 e-transfer requested on a Tuesday at 10:14 a.m. Pacific Time. The casino recorded it as completed at 10:47 a.m. the same day, and the Interac notification hit my email inbox at 11:02 a.m. That is a total turnaround time of 48 minutes from request to funds, which is remarkably noteworthy for any platform catering to Canadian customers. The second test, a $1,200 withdrawal submitted on a Thursday afternoon, followed a similar pattern. It was approved in 52 minutes, and the amount were in my Scotiabank chequing account before I completed lunch. There was no manual intervention, no follow-up email demanding additional documents, and no trace of the infamous 72-hour pending hold that troubles some offshore-facing casinos.
What makes these numbers relevant is that I reran the e-transfer test four times across different weeks, and the longest I ever had to wait was one hour and nine minutes. That uniformity tells me Fambet Casino has either streamlined its e-transfer payout system or staffs its payment department to cover the North American time zones proactively. I also found that the casino does not impose any processing fee for Interac withdrawals, which is a notable cost saving for Canadian players who are accustomed to seeing $2-to-$5 fees applied by other operators. The only limitation I encountered was the standard rolling maximum that refreshes every 24 hours, but that is an Interac network constraint, not something Fambet controls. For a Canadian player who desires to access winnings swiftly and without cryptocurrency, the Interac e-Transfer pipeline is the clear champion in this test.
Bank wire transfers are the old-guard withdrawal method that many high-limit Canadian players still utilize, and I wanted to see if Fambet Casino could handle them without the multi-day delays that often cause wires to feel like a vestige. I submitted a $500 wire transfer to my RBC Royal Bank account on a Monday morning. The casino approved the request and designated it as sent within four hours, which is a reasonable internal processing window. The wire then passed into the SWIFT network, and I followed its progress using the reference number provided by Fambet’s cashier team. The funds appeared in my RBC account at 11:20 a.m. on Wednesday, exactly two business days after the submission. That timeline is consistent with the standard Canadian domestic wire settlement, which typically requires one to three business days depending on the sending institution’s cut-off times.
I performed a second wire test for $750 on a Thursday afternoon, and this one covered the weekend boundary. The request was completed on Thursday, but the funds did not appear in my account until the following Monday afternoon. That three-business-day wait seemed long, but it was entirely driven by the Canadian banking calendar, not by any delay on Fambet Casino’s side. The casino offered a clear transaction receipt and a SWIFT tracking code, which I could confirm independently through RBC’s online banking. One thing I liked is that Fambet Casino did not impose a wire processing fee for either test, which is a departure from the $25-to-$50 fees that many offshore casinos charge on Canadian wire withdrawals. For players moving larger sums, the fee savings alone can warrant using the wire option, even if the speed is never going to rival with Interac or crypto.
I tested cryptocurrency withdrawals using Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin because those three assets represent the spectrum of network speed and transaction cost that Canadian crypto users care about. For each test, I deposited the equivalent of $150 Canadian in crypto, fulfilled the wagering requirement, and then transferred the remaining balance to an external non-custodial wallet. The Bitcoin withdrawal was submitted at 2:15 p.m. on a Friday. Fambet Casino sent the transaction to the mempool within 18 minutes, and I got the first network confirmation 34 minutes later. The funds were fully usable in my wallet after three confirmations, which needed a total of 52 minutes from the moment I clicked withdraw. That is a solid result for a Bitcoin payout, especially on a Friday afternoon when network congestion can spike.
Litecoin was even faster, as expected. My $110 withdrawal was processed and broadcast in 12 minutes, and the transaction reached six confirmations on the Litecoin blockchain in just under 8 minutes. The total end-to-end time was 20 minutes, which renders Litecoin the speed champion of my entire testing series. Ethereum fell in the middle. The casino processed the withdrawal in 15 minutes, and the ETH showed up in my MetaMask wallet after 22 minutes, with gas fees covered by the casino at no deduction from my balance. I want to emphasize that Fambet Casino did not impose any internal holding period on crypto withdrawals beyond the automated fraud check. There was no manual approval step, no request for a selfie with my hardware wallet, and no reversal risk once the transaction was broadcast. For Canadian players who are confident managing their own private keys, the crypto cashout experience at Fambet is fast, consistent, and free of the banking delays that characterize fiat methods.

Withdrawals via card are often the most confusing aspect for Canadian players, because many casinos accept Visa and Mastercard for deposits but silently direct payouts through a different and slower method. Fambet Casino does offer Visa and Mastercard withdrawals directly to the card used for depositing, which I confirmed by funding my account with a TD Visa debit card and later submitting a $300 payout back to that same card. The deposit was instant, as expected, but the withdrawal timeline was a different matter. I filed the request on a Wednesday at 8:30 a.m., and the casino’s system indicated it was processed within three hours. After that, the true waiting began. The funds appeared as a credit on my Visa statement on the morning of the fifth business day, which in calendar terms meant I waited from Wednesday to the following Tuesday.

That five-business-day window is not a Fambet Casino shortcoming; it is the standard settlement cycle for card-not-present transactions in the Canadian payments ecosystem. Visa and Mastercard networks batch these reversals, and the issuing bank in Canada often retains the credit for an extra day before posting it. I repeated the test with a Mastercard debit card from BMO, and the timeline was identical. The important lesson for Canadian players is that card payouts are trustworthy and fully traceable, but they are the slowest electronic option available. If you want your winnings to hit your bank account by the weekend, you should not select the card rail. I also observed that Fambet Casino did not apply any additional internal delay beyond the initial three-hour processing window, which is superior to some competitors that keep card withdrawals in a manual queue for 24 hours before releasing them to the acquiring bank.
MuchBetter and ecoPayz are two e-wallet platforms that have established a solid user base in Canada, largely because they support Interac loading and deliver low-friction mobile apps. I evaluated both as withdrawal endpoints at Fambet Casino to see if they could deliver the near-instant payout experience that e-wallets are known for. My MuchBetter withdrawal of $200 was initiated at 9:05 a.m. on a weekday. The casino approved it in 22 minutes, and the funds showed up in my MuchBetter app balance at 9:27 a.m. That is a 22-minute total cycle, which matches the speed of Litecoin and surpasses every fiat method I tested. I then moved the money from MuchBetter to my bank account via their built-in Interac transfer, which required another 35 minutes, but that secondary step is not under Fambet Casino’s control.
ecoPayz worked nearly as well. A $175 withdrawal was handled in 28 minutes, and the balance was ready in my ecoPayz account immediately. I noted that ecoPayz withdrawals required an additional one-time verification step the first time I utilized the method, where I had to approve the transaction via a code sent to my email. That contributed about five minutes to the process, but on subsequent withdrawals the step vanished and the timeline decreased to a consistent sub-30-minute window. Both e-wallets kept the same speed irrespective of whether I cashed out on a weekday or a Saturday, which indicates that Fambet Casino’s e-wallet processing queue is either fully automated or managed around the clock. For Canadian players who want a digital intermediary between the casino and their bank account, MuchBetter is the top choice in this test, combining rapid casino-side processing with a direct path to Interac cash-out.
No conversation about payment speed would be incomplete without addressing the verification bottleneck that every Canadian player faces on their first withdrawal. My testing confirmed that Fambet Casino uses a strict document review for all initial cashouts, regardless of the method chosen. The first time I attempted to withdraw after completing the KYC upload, the system put a temporary hold on the transaction and dispatched an email telling me to confirm my identity again. That sounds like a hassle, but it was really a quick process. I sent a photo of my passport as a secondary document, and the hold got removed in under two hours. From that point forward, every subsequent withdrawal sailed through without any manual review, which suggests the casino uses a tiered verification model in which the first cashout triggers a deep check and later ones are treated as trusted.
The real-world impact is your first withdrawal will almost always take longer than the numbers I mentioned for my repeat tests fambetcasinoo.com. If you submit your documents during Canadian business hours and the compliance team is fully staffed, you could see your first e-transfer clear in four to six hours. If you upload documents on a Friday night, you may be waiting until Monday morning for the review to complete, and then another few hours for the payment to process. I recommend that any Canadian player opening a new Fambet Casino account do the KYC step immediately after the first deposit, even if you do not plan to withdraw for weeks. Getting verified early removes the single biggest variable from the payout speed equation and enables you to access the fast lanes I noted without a surprise delay on your first cashout. In my experience, once the account is fully verified, Fambet Casino’s payment engine delivers a level of consistency that is rare in the Canadian market.