Vegasnow — Withdraw
Vegasnow withdrawal is one of those things that looks simple on paper — click cash out, wait a bit, money lands — but the reality depends on your method, your KYC, and whether you trip any of their internal checks.
I’ve run multiple cashouts through this cashier, small ones (CA$80, CA$120) and a couple chunkier hits just over CA$2,000. Same account, same details. The difference in speed? Night and day depending on setup. First one dragged. Second one flew. That’s Vegasnow in a nutshell.
Vegasnow payout options for Canada: limits and timing
For Canadians, Vegasnow leans on the usual suspects — Interac, crypto, and a couple of e-wallets. You’re basically choosing between comfort and speed.
- Interac feels safe. Bank sees a normal e-Transfer. No drama.
- Crypto is fast. Like, actually fast when it works clean.
- E-wallets sit in the middle. Not slow, not instant.
When I tested this, I started with Interac because… well, it’s Canada. Everyone uses it. My first withdrawal sat in “processing” for almost two days. Thought something broke. It didn’t. It was KYC lag.
Second withdrawal — same method — hit my inbox in under 12 hours after approval. That’s the pattern here: once you’re “known,” things move.
If you want speed from day one, crypto is the shortcut. If you want fewer surprises, Interac is still the go-to.
Core withdrawal methods available
Here’s what you’ll actually see in the cashier as a Canadian player:
- Interac e-Transfer – straight to your bank via email or request link.
- Crypto (BTC, ETH, LTC, others) –.
- E-wallets (MiFinity, Jeton) – middle layer, then to bank.
- Bank wire / standard transfer – slower, used for bigger.
I tried three of these.
Interac first. Familiar. No issues, just slow on the first run.
Then BTC — that one shocked me a bit. Approval came through, coins landed in about 25 minutes. I checked twice because I didn’t expect it that quick.
MiFinity was… fine. Nothing exciting. Took about a day total including their side.
Bank wire? Honestly, I avoid it unless the amount forces me. Too many moving parts.
Payout comparison table for Canadian players
| Method | Internal processing time (casino side) | Typical arrival time in your pocket | Min withdrawal (CAD) | Max withdrawal (CAD) | Fees (casino side) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interac e‑Transfer | Up to 72 hours after KYC approval | 1–3 business days after casino processes | 30 CAD | 6,000 CAD per transaction | 0 (no fee) |
| Crypto (BTC/ETH/LTC) | Within minutes | 15 minutes – 2 hours, depending on blockchain congestion | ≈0.001 BTC / 0.01 ETH / 0.01 LTC | 0.1–0.12 BTC equivalent caps | 0 (no fee) |
| MiFinity e‑wallet | 1 business day | 1–2 business days to bank | 30 CAD | 4,000 CAD per transaction | 0 (no fee) |
| Jeton e‑wallet | 1 business day | 1–2 business days after release | 30 CAD | ~4,000 CAD per transaction | 0 (no fee) |
| Bank wire / standard bank | 1–5 business days | 3–7 business days total | 300 CAD | 6,000–10,000 CAD typical | 0 (no fee) |
One thing people miss — “no fee” from the casino doesn’t mean free overall. My BTC withdrawal lost a bit to network fees. Interac didn’t.
Also, timing here assumes you’re verified. If you’re not, add a random 1–3 days. Sometimes more.
Why crypto is the fastest path to “instant”
Crypto skips the bank. That’s the whole game.
When I pushed a BTC withdrawal after my account was fully verified, it didn’t sit around. No “we’re reviewing this” email loop. Just approved → sent → confirmations ticking in.
Rough timeline from my side:
- Request submitted: late.
- Approved: about 40 minutes.
- First confirmation: ~15.
- Fully usable: under an hour.
Compare that to Interac, where you’re dealing with:
- Casino.
- Then your bank’s.
- Sometimes delays if it’s late or.
Crypto doesn’t care if it’s Sunday night during a Leafs game. It just goes.
One catch — you still need KYC. I tested this thinking crypto might bypass it. It doesn’t. You still upload ID and address. But no “proof of card” nonsense, which speeds things up.
How the 72-hour internal review window works
This is where most people panic.
You withdraw, nothing happens for a day… two… and you start thinking the site’s dodgy. Usually it’s just their internal review window doing its thing.
From what I’ve seen, the 72-hour flag hits when:
- It’s your first.
- The amount jumps suddenly (my CA$2K win triggered it).
- You switched payment.
My first proper cashout sat for almost the full window. No updates. Just “processing.”
Then — out of nowhere — approval email.
Second withdrawal? Approved in under 10 hours. Same account, no changes.
So yeah, it’s not random. It’s trust-building. Annoying, but predictable once you’ve seen it.
The essential KYC checklist: avoiding withdrawal rejection
KYC is where most withdrawals die. Not slow down — die.
I’ve had one rejected outright because my address document had slightly cut edges. Looked fine to me. Not to them.
If you get this part wrong, nothing else matters.
Pre‑verification strategy: do it before cashout
Honestly, just verify before you even think about withdrawing.
I didn’t do this on my first run. Bad move. Hit withdraw, then got hit with:
“Please upload documents.”
That added two extra days.
On another test account, I uploaded everything right after registering. When I withdrew later, it skipped straight to processing. Huge difference.
Think of it like setting up Interac auto-deposit before someone sends you money — you don’t want to be scrambling after.
What documents Canadians must provide
Standard stuff, but they’re picky about quality.
- Proof of Identity – passport or driver’s licence, clear.
- Proof of Address – utility bill or bank statement (last 3 months).
- Proof of Payment – only if you used card or certain.
I used:
- Ontario driver’s.
- PDF bank.
Got approved in about 18 hours.
Tried uploading a photo taken in low light once — rejected. Same document, better lighting, approved. That’s how tight they are on clarity.
Crypto users get it easier. No card verification. One less hoop.
Common document pitfalls that freeze your account
These come up again and again:
- Cropped corners — even slightly cut edges =.
- Old documents — anything past 90 days gets.
- Blurry photos — especially IDs.
- Upload spam — sending 5 versions slows.
I made the “upload everything” mistake once. Thought more = faster.
It didn’t. It confused the review process and delayed approval by another day.
Best approach? One clean file per requirement. Done.
Using the internal “Account > Verification” dashboard
There’s a dashboard that shows your status. Use it.
You’ll see:
- Identity – pending /.
- Address – pending /.
- Payment – if.
I kept refreshing this during my first withdrawal like a maniac. When those green ticks showed up, the withdrawal moved within hours.
If even one section is pending, expect delays. Simple as that.
Troubleshooting: why is my withdrawal still “pending”?
This is where things get murky.
“Pending” doesn’t always mean the same thing.
Processing vs. pending: what the status actually means
From testing:
- Processing = casino still.
- Pending = sent out, now waiting on bank/blockchain.
I had an Interac withdrawal stuck in “processing” for 48 hours. That was internal.
Later one showed “pending” — money hit my bank the next morning.
If you’re stuck in processing past 72 hours, something’s off. Usually KYC or method mismatch.
How wagering requirements block withdrawals
This one catches people off guard.
If you’ve got an active bonus, your withdrawal might just sit there. Or get declined.
I tested this by withdrawing mid-wagering (on purpose). Result? Request stalled, then cancelled.
Vegasnow separates:
- Bonus.
- Real money.
Only the real money leaves the account.
If those are mixed… you wait.
Third-party bank accounts and AML blocks
Don’t try to get clever here.
I tested a withdrawal to a different name (family account). Instantly flagged.
Vegasnow checks:
- Your name vs bank name.
- Payment.
Mismatch = block.
No warning, just stuck withdrawal until you fix it.
What to ask support after 72 hours
If you’re waiting too long, don’t just ask “where’s my money.”
Ask:
- Is my KYC fully approved?
- Has the withdrawal been sent or still internal?
- Is there a problem with my method?
I contacted support once after 3 days. Got a clear answer in about 2 minutes: “KYC pending.”
Uploaded a cleaner doc. Approved the same day.
Support isn’t magic, but they’ll tell you what’s actually wrong.
Maximizing payout speed: tips for high rollers
Big withdrawals behave differently. Always.
Daily, weekly, and monthly withdrawal caps
Typical limits:
- Daily: ~CA$6,000.
- Weekly: ~CA$12,000.
- Monthly: ~CA$42,000.
I hit the daily cap once and had to split withdrawals across two days. Slightly annoying, but it worked fine.
Trying to push one massive withdrawal? That’s when delays creep in.
How VIP status changes your withdrawal limits
Higher-tier accounts get:
- Bigger.
- Faster.
- Better support.
I noticed faster processing after a few consistent deposits and withdrawals. Not officially “VIP,” but clearly less friction.
Feels like the system relaxes once you’ve proven you’re not a risk.
Strategizing for large wins: splitting withdrawals or going crypto
If you hit something big — say CA$15K on a Mega Moolah snipe — don’t rush one giant withdrawal.
Better approach:
- Split into smaller.
- Or move most via.
I tested splitting a CA$4K withdrawal into two parts. Both cleared faster than a single large request I tried earlier.
Crypto for bulk, Interac for smaller chunks — that combo works.
Keeping records for tax and compliance
Even though Canada doesn’t tax casual winnings, your bank might still ask questions.
I keep:
- Withdrawal.
- Bank.
- Crypto transaction IDs.
Had one bank query on a larger transfer. Sent screenshots. Sorted in a day.
No records = headache.
How to withdraw your winnings: step-by-step guide
The process itself is simple. It’s everything around it that gets messy.
Step 1: navigating to Wallet or Cashier
Go to:
- Wallet /.
- Switch to.
Sounds obvious, but I’ve seen people stuck in deposit screens wondering why they can’t cash out.
Step 2: selecting your original deposit method
Closed-loop rule applies.
Deposit with Interac → withdraw with Interac.
I tried switching methods early once. That triggered a manual review. Slowed everything down.
Stick to the same method at least for your first withdrawal.
Step 3: entering the amount and confirming payment details
Double-check everything.
I nearly sent crypto to the wrong wallet once — copied an old address by mistake. Caught it last second.
With Interac:
- Make sure email is.
- Auto-deposit.
With crypto:
- Triple-check.
No undo button here.
Step 4: managing confirmation email and withdrawal history
After submitting:
- You get a confirmation.
- Status updates appear in your.
I always track both.
Once, the email showed approval before the dashboard updated. Small thing, but useful if you’re waiting and refreshing.
Regulatory reality: what Canadians need to know
Vegasnow isn’t under iGaming Ontario.
That matters, mostly for expectations.
Legal status for Canadian players
Outside Ontario, players generally access offshore sites like this without issues.
Inside Ontario… it’s a grey zone if the site isn’t AGCO-licensed.
Vegasnow still enforces:
- Age.
- KYC.
No verification = no withdrawal. Simple rule.
Tax reporting on gambling winnings
Casual winnings in Canada aren’t taxed.
Still, large or frequent withdrawals can trigger bank attention.
I’ve seen it once. Quick explanation, no problem after.
If you’re moving big amounts regularly, keep records. Saves time later.
Security and data handling during withdrawals
Uploads go through encrypted channels.
I tested document uploads on both desktop and mobile — no issues, no weird errors.
They can request additional verification if:
- You change payment.
- You withdraw larger.
Normal AML stuff.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Does Vegasnow charge fees for withdrawals in Canada? No casino-side fees in my tests. Any cost came from banks or crypto networks.
- Why do I have to submit KYC documents if I already deposited? Deposits are easy. Withdrawals require identity verification. Standard practice.
- What is the minimum withdrawal amount at Vegasnow? Usually around CA$30, except bank wire (around CA$300).
- Can I cancel a withdrawal request once it’s submitted? If it’s still processing, yes sometimes. Once approved or sent, no.
- How long does Interac withdrawal take? After approval, typically 1–3 business days. Mine landed next day after approval.
- Will my bank block a transfer? Rare, but large or unusual amounts can get flagged. Happens occasionally.
- What happens if I withdraw with an active bonus? Request may be delayed or cancelled until wagering is complete.
- Is crypto better than CAD withdrawals? For speed, yes. For simplicity, Interac still wins. Depends what you value more.