Joined
2025-01-28
Posts
553
Location
Montréal, QC

Been tracking network fees all week and Bitcoin just hit $45 average transaction cost while Ethereum dropped to $8. That's a complete flip from last month when ETH was running

0+ and BTC was sitting around
2.

Made three deposits this week - two Bitcoin at $42 and $47 fees, one Ethereum at $9. The Bitcoin ones took 35 minutes to confirm, ETH cleared in 8 minutes. Starting to wonder if it's time to switch my main crypto for casino deposits.

Current network fees (as of Thursday 3PM):

  • Bitcoin: $45 average, 30-45 minute confirmation
  • Ethereum: $8 average, 5-15 minute confirmation
  • Litecoin: $0.85 average, 12-20 minutes
  • Dogecoin: $0.45 average, 8-15 minutes

Anyone else switching their deposit strategy based on these fee swings? The $45 BTC fee is eating into my bankroll more than I'm comfortable with.

Joined
2024-11-16
Posts
480
Location
London, ON

The fee differential makes perfect sense when you look at network congestion patterns. Bitcoin's mempool is sitting at 450MB backlog while Ethereum's gas usage dropped 60% since the Dencun upgrade in March. That $45 BTC fee represents roughly 1.8% of a

Specific question on MyStake's withdrawal process. After requesting a withdrawal, they send a confirmation email that you must click to authorize the cashout — this is a security step that's not common across most operators, MyStake is one of the few that does it. Mine arrived 3 hours and 11 minutes after I requested the withdrawal.

Is the 3-hour email delay typical? Looking at MyStake forum threads elsewhere, some folks say the email arrives within 5 minutes, some say 6+ hours. I'm wondering if the delay correlates with deposit size, account age, or just operational load.

Practical effect: my withdrawal didn't actually start processing until I clicked the link 3 hours later. Total time from request to BTC arrival was 4 hours 22 minutes, of which 3 hours was the email wait.

500 deposit, which is significant drag on your effective bankroll.

I ran the numbers on my last 20 deposits across different networks. Bitcoin averaged $41.20 in fees over two weeks, Ethereum averaged $9.80, and Litecoin came in at $0.92. For someone making 3-4 deposits per month, that's

64.80 in Bitcoin fees versus
9.20 in Ethereum fees - a
25.60 monthly difference.

The confirmation time variance is also worth considering. Bitcoin's showing 15-minute to 2-hour spreads depending on fee tier, while Ethereum's holding steady at 6-12 minutes regardless of gas price. From a statistical standpoint, Ethereum's offering better predictability and lower total transaction cost right now.

Joined
2025-10-31
Posts
69
Location
Saskatoon, SK

Hold up - those Ethereum fees won't stay at $8 forever. Remember when everyone switched to ETH last summer because Bitcoin was expensive, then ETH shot up to $65 fees during the NFT craze? Network fees are cyclical and you'll get burned chasing the cheapest option.

Also, not every casino processes ETH deposits the same way. Some still batch them which adds delay regardless of network speed.

Joined
2025-02-19
Posts
115
Location
Halifax, NS

Switched to Ethereum last Tuesday after getting hit with a $52 Bitcoin fee on a

800 deposit at Metaspins. The Bitcoin transaction took 47 minutes to confirm and I missed the start of a tournament I wanted to enter.

Made my next deposit Wednesday night using ETH - $9.50 fee on

Specific question on MyStake's withdrawal process. After requesting a withdrawal, they send a confirmation email that you must click to authorize the cashout — this is a security step that's not common across most operators, MyStake is one of the few that does it. Mine arrived 3 hours and 11 minutes after I requested the withdrawal.

Is the 3-hour email delay typical? Looking at MyStake forum threads elsewhere, some folks say the email arrives within 5 minutes, some say 6+ hours. I'm wondering if the delay correlates with deposit size, account age, or just operational load.

Practical effect: my withdrawal didn't actually start processing until I clicked the link 3 hours later. Total time from request to BTC arrival was 4 hours 22 minutes, of which 3 hours was the email wait.

200, confirmed in 11 minutes. Played the same Pragmatic slots, hit a decent run on Gates of Olympus for $890, then withdrew

Specific question on MyStake's withdrawal process. After requesting a withdrawal, they send a confirmation email that you must click to authorize the cashout — this is a security step that's not common across most operators, MyStake is one of the few that does it. Mine arrived 3 hours and 11 minutes after I requested the withdrawal.

Is the 3-hour email delay typical? Looking at MyStake forum threads elsewhere, some folks say the email arrives within 5 minutes, some say 6+ hours. I'm wondering if the delay correlates with deposit size, account age, or just operational load.

Practical effect: my withdrawal didn't actually start processing until I clicked the link 3 hours later. Total time from request to BTC arrival was 4 hours 22 minutes, of which 3 hours was the email wait.

650 total. The withdrawal fee was
2 in ETH versus the

Specific question on MyStake's withdrawal process. After requesting a withdrawal, they send a confirmation email that you must click to authorize the cashout — this is a security step that's not common across most operators, MyStake is one of the few that does it. Mine arrived 3 hours and 11 minutes after I requested the withdrawal.

Is the 3-hour email delay typical? Looking at MyStake forum threads elsewhere, some folks say the email arrives within 5 minutes, some say 6+ hours. I'm wondering if the delay correlates with deposit size, account age, or just operational load.

Practical effect: my withdrawal didn't actually start processing until I clicked the link 3 hours later. Total time from request to BTC arrival was 4 hours 22 minutes, of which 3 hours was the email wait.

8 Bitcoin fee they charge.

Did the math on my February activity - paid

47 total in Bitcoin fees across 8 deposits and 3 withdrawals. If I'd used Ethereum at current rates, same transactions would've cost $94. That's

Specific question on MyStake's withdrawal process. After requesting a withdrawal, they send a confirmation email that you must click to authorize the cashout — this is a security step that's not common across most operators, MyStake is one of the few that does it. Mine arrived 3 hours and 11 minutes after I requested the withdrawal.

Is the 3-hour email delay typical? Looking at MyStake forum threads elsewhere, some folks say the email arrives within 5 minutes, some say 6+ hours. I'm wondering if the delay correlates with deposit size, account age, or just operational load.

Practical effect: my withdrawal didn't actually start processing until I clicked the link 3 hours later. Total time from request to BTC arrival was 4 hours 22 minutes, of which 3 hours was the email wait.

53 difference, which is basically a free weekend session.

Joined
2025-02-11
Posts
237
Location
Toronto, ON

This is confusing - I thought Bitcoin was always the cheapest option for crypto gambling? Should I be setting up an Ethereum wallet instead? How do I know which casinos accept ETH deposits and if the withdrawal fees are actually lower?

Joined
2024-08-20
Posts
92
Location
Calgary, AB

The fee structure varies significantly by operator. I track withdrawal processing across 15 crypto casinos and the patterns are interesting. 7bit charges flat

5 for Bitcoin withdrawals regardless of network fees, but their Ethereum withdrawals are dynamic - currently
1-13 depending on gas prices.

What most players miss is the deposit bonus implications. Some sites offer higher match percentages for Bitcoin deposits (110% vs 100% for ETH), which can offset the higher network fees if you're depositing larger amounts. Always calculate the net benefit including both fees and bonus value.

Joined
2025-05-25
Posts
370
Location
Victoria, BC

Honestly, I just stick with whatever's working. Been using Litecoin for months because the fees are under a buck and confirmation times are predictable. Sure, it's not as widely accepted as Bitcoin or Ethereum, but most decent sites support it now. Why stress about saving

0-20 in fees when I'm there to have fun anyway?

Joined
2025-11-11
Posts
450
Location
Winnipeg, MB

@casual_chris_mb mentioned Litecoin under a buck - that's still way higher than Bitcoin Cash which is running 2-4 cents per transaction right now. While everyone's panicking about Bitcoin's $45 fees, BCH has been rock solid for months.

I've been tracking my withdrawals since October and https://mbitcasinopartners2.com/a332ba659?b=86ahfhqa6 processes BCH in under 90 minutes consistently, compared to 4-6 hours for Ethereum when gas spikes. The fee difference adds up fast if you're making weekly withdrawals - saved me

80 last month alone switching from Bitcoin.

0+ and BTC was sitting around
2.

Made three deposits this week - two Bitcoin at $42 and $47 fees, one Ethereum at $9. The Bitcoin ones took 35 minutes to confirm, ETH cleared in 8 minutes. Starting to wonder if it's time to switch my main crypto for casino deposits.

Current network fees (as of Thursday 3PM):

  • Bitcoin: $45 average, 30-45 minute confirmation
  • Ethereum: $8 average, 5-15 minute confirmation
  • Litecoin: $0.85 average, 12-20 minutes
  • Dogecoin: $0.45 average, 8-15 minutes

Anyone else switching their deposit strategy based on these fee swings? The $45 BTC fee is eating into my bankroll more than I'm comfortable with.

Joined
2025-01-08
Posts
403
Location
Saskatoon, SK

@BCH Betsy tracking 2-4 cents since October is solid data, but here's what nobody's mentioning - those withdrawal minimums are still killing small players regardless of network fees. I pulled my records from 7bit and they're holding firm at 0.001 BTC minimum withdrawal even with these $45 fees, which means you're eating a massive percentage on anything under

Been tracking network fees all week and Bitcoin just hit $45 average transaction cost while Ethereum dropped to $8. That's a complete flip from last month when ETH was running 00.

The real issue isn't the network fee itself, it's operators using high network fees as cover to keep withdrawal thresholds artificially high. Three months ago when Bitcoin fees were under $5, these same sites had identical minimums. Convenient how those thresholds never drop when the network clears up.

0+ and BTC was sitting around
2.

Made three deposits this week - two Bitcoin at $42 and $47 fees, one Ethereum at $9. The Bitcoin ones took 35 minutes to confirm, ETH cleared in 8 minutes. Starting to wonder if it's time to switch my main crypto for casino deposits.

Current network fees (as of Thursday 3PM):

  • Bitcoin: $45 average, 30-45 minute confirmation
  • Ethereum: $8 average, 5-15 minute confirmation
  • Litecoin: $0.85 average, 12-20 minutes
  • Dogecoin: $0.45 average, 8-15 minutes

Anyone else switching their deposit strategy based on these fee swings? The $45 BTC fee is eating into my bankroll more than I'm comfortable with.