Home » Sports Betting in Canada » Best Betting Sites in Canada » Sportsbook Payment Methods in Canada » Apple Pay Betting Sites in Canada: Fast Mobile Deposits

Apple Pay Betting Sites in Canada: Fast Mobile Deposits

If your phone already taps to pay for coffee, it can fund a bet the same way. An Apple Pay betting site lets iPhone players deposit with Face ID instead of typing card numbers into a cashier, with the card tokenised so the sportsbook never sees it. Acceptance has spread fastest through Ontario’s regulated market, where bet365, Caesars and others now list it. This guide covers how Apple Pay deposits work at a Canadian sportsbook, the one catch on withdrawals, the fees, limits and devices that apply, and how it stacks up against Interac.

Apple Pay Betting Sites in Canada - Squawka Canada banner

Apple Pay betting at a glance

DetailWhat to expect
How it worksTokenises a Visa or Mastercard in Apple Wallet; you approve with Face ID or Touch ID
Deposit speedInstant
WithdrawalsNot supported – payouts route to Interac, bank transfer or your card
Minimum depositUsually C$10
MaximumCommonly up to C$10,000 per deposit (your card limits apply)
FeesNone from the sportsbook or Apple
RequirementsiPhone or iPad with a card in Apple Wallet; the book’s iOS app
Best forFast, private mobile deposits in Ontario’s regulated market

How Apple Pay works at betting sites

Apple Pay is a security layer over a card you already hold. When you deposit, the sportsbook receives a one-time token rather than your card number, you confirm with Face ID or Touch ID, and the bet credit lands instantly. That tokenisation is the real advantage: the book cannot store, leak or re-bill a card it never saw. A debit card is the sensible funding choice – a credit card behind Apple Pay keeps the usual drawbacks, including Canadian issuers that treat gambling deposits as cash advances with interest from day one. It is an iOS method by nature; Android bettors use Google Pay instead.

What you need: devices and cards

Apple Pay betting is an iOS affair. You need an iPhone or iPad with Apple Wallet set up, and you deposit inside the sportsbook’s app – bet365, for example, offers it to iOS users on its Sports app for mobile and tablet. The card loaded in your Wallet must be a Visa or Mastercard, and several books (including bet365 and theScore Bet) specifically want a Mastercard or Visa Debit; Interac-branded bank cards are not accepted inside Apple Pay. Android users get the same one-tap experience through Google Pay instead.

How to deposit with Apple Pay

  1. Add a Visa or Mastercard (ideally a debit card) to Apple Wallet if it is not there already
  2. Open your sportsbook’s iOS app, go to the cashier and choose Apple Pay
  3. Enter the amount – minimums are usually C$10
  4. Confirm with Face ID, Touch ID or your passcode; the balance updates instantly
  5. Check any deposit-bonus terms before you claim, as they vary by book and province

Withdrawing winnings: the Apple Pay catch

Apple Pay is a deposit-only method in Canada – you cannot withdraw winnings to it. That is not a quirk of one book: Apple Pay is a payment-authorisation layer over a card, not an account that can receive money, so there is nowhere for the sportsbook to send a payout. Every regulated book we checked – bet365, Caesars, LeoVegas, Sports Interaction and PowerPlay – excludes it from withdrawals. Plan your exit before your first deposit: winnings come back via Interac e-Transfer (the main Canadian payout rail), bank transfer, your debit card or an e-wallet. Our Interac betting guide covers where most Apple Pay deposits actually get paid back out. (Ignore US guides that claim books pay winnings back to Apple Pay – that is US-only and does not apply here.)

Speed, fees and limits

Deposits are instant – the betting balance updates the moment you authorise, even if the underlying card charge takes a day or two to settle at your bank. Neither Apple nor the sportsbook charges a fee. The minimum is usually C$10 and Apple Pay deposits are commonly capped around C$10,000 per transaction, with your card’s own limits applying underneath. The one cost to watch is the funding card: route Apple Pay through a credit card and your bank may treat the deposit as a cash advance – high interest plus a flat fee – or decline a gambling-coded transaction outright. Fund it with a debit card and that risk disappears.

Apple Pay vs Interac for betting

 InteracApple Pay
DepositYesYes
WithdrawalYes – the main Canadian payout railNo (deposit-only)
SpeedInstant deposit; payout a few hours to 24hInstant deposit
DeviceAny (your bank login)iPhone/iPad with a card in Wallet
Best forA complete two-way methodFast, private one-tap deposits

Use Interac as your all-rounder because it handles both legs; use Apple Pay for the deposit only – a one-tap, biometric top-up – then withdraw via Interac. Many Canadians pair them: Apple Pay in, Interac out.

Which Canadian betting sites accept Apple Pay?

Acceptance is concentrated in Ontario’s regulated market. Among the books we review, bet365 lists Apple Pay for deposits (C$10 to C$10,000, instant, free), and Caesars Sportsbook carries it in its Ontario cashier from C$10. LeoVegas and Sports Interaction both take it in Ontario, and PowerPlay offers it across Canada – all deposit-only, with payouts routed to Interac, bank transfer or an e-wallet. BetRivers is the notable holdout among the big Ontario books, sticking to Interac, cards and PayPal. As always the method is the second question – the licence comes first, and our best betting sites rankings handle that.

Is Apple Pay safe for betting?

It is arguably safer than typing your card into a betting site. When you add a card to Apple Wallet, your bank creates an encrypted, device-specific number stored in your iPhone’s Secure Element – Apple never keeps your real card number and it is never held on Apple’s servers. Each deposit uses that device number plus a one-time code, so the sportsbook receives a token, not your card details, and every payment needs Face ID, Touch ID or your passcode. The result: the book cannot store or re-bill a card it never saw, and a lost phone cannot be used to deposit without your biometrics.

How to choose an Apple Pay sportsbook

With the deposit method sorted, judge the book on what matters: an iGaming Ontario / AGCO licence (or your provincial platform), how fast it pays out – since your winnings will not return via Apple Pay – competitive odds, and a clean iOS app. Start with our best betting sites in Canada shortlist, and check the cashier lists Apple Pay before you sign up, as acceptance can vary by province. For every method side by side, see our sportsbook payment methods guide.

Apple Pay betting in Ontario

Ontario’s open, iGaming Ontario-regulated market is where Apple Pay is most widely available – bet365, Caesars, LeoVegas and Sports Interaction all support it, alongside Canada-wide PowerPlay. Outside Ontario the provincial lottery platforms vary: Ontario’s own OLG/PROLINE+ accepts Apple Pay to fund a player account, and Quebec’s Mise-o-jeu+ lists it too, while PlayNow in BC, Manitoba and Saskatchewan keeps a narrower menu. Beyond the regulated books and lottery platforms, “Apple Pay betting sites” usually means offshore operators – the safe route is an iGaming Ontario book or your provincial platform, and only ever bet what you can afford to lose.

Responsible gambling

Apple Pay’s one-tap speed makes depositing effortless, which is exactly why it is worth setting limits before you start. Every iGaming Ontario book offers deposit and loss limits, time-outs and self-exclusion, and free, confidential support is available through ConnexOntario and your provincial helpline. Betting should stay entertainment – only ever stake what you can afford to lose, and never chase losses.

Apple Pay betting FAQs