This guide explains how FBS withdrawals work in the Trader Area/app, how deposit methods control withdrawal routing, and how cards, bank transfers, e-wallets, fees, verification, and fund security protections affect Forex traders.
Avilable Fund Withdrawal Methods of FBS - Updated in 2026 Table of Contents
- Where FBS withdrawals are made
- The core rule that controls withdrawal methods
- Method group one: bank cards (Visa, Mastercard, Maestro)
- Method group two: wire transfer (bank transfer)
- Method group three: e-wallets and online payment providers
- Method group four: local banks and local payment methods
- Security controls used during withdrawals
- What determines which withdrawal methods you actually see
- Practical selection guide for Forex traders
- Common withdrawal friction points (and what they mean)
- FBS fund deposit methods and fund security for Forex trading
- How deposits work at FBS
- The main FBS deposit method categories
- Depositing by bank card
- Depositing by bank transfer and local banks
- Depositing through online payment providers and digital wallets
- Fees, commission, and what “0% commission” means
- Currency handling: deposits in local currency
- Verification and transaction access
- Fund security at FBS: what the safeguards are and what they do
- How deposits and security connect in real Forex trading
- Practical deposit planning for Forex traders using FBS
Withdrawing money from a Forex broker is not just a “cash-out” step. It is part of the full trading cycle: you deposit, you trade, you manage risk, and you withdraw profits or remaining balance back to a payment channel that can be audited and protected. FBS structures withdrawals around that idea. You request a withdrawal inside the FBS Trader Area (web) or the FBS app, choose a payment method shown for your profile, enter the required details, and confirm the request.
FBS supports a large catalog of deposit and withdrawal payment methods (more than 200), and the exact set shown inside your account depends on your country of residence. This is why two traders can both use FBS and still see different withdrawal options on the “Withdrawal” screen.
Where FBS withdrawals are made
FBS processes withdrawals through its Trader Area on the website and through the FBS mobile app. The workflow is consistent:
- Open Finances (web) or Funds (app)
- Choose Withdrawal / Withdraw
- Pick a payment method shown on the withdrawal page
- Select the trading account you’re withdrawing from
- Provide the required payment details (cards can require uploading images of the card)
- Enter the amount and confirm the withdrawal
This is important because the withdrawal method list is not a static “marketing page list.” It is a live list tied to your account, your country settings, and the payment rails that can legally and operationally serve your region.
The core rule that controls withdrawal methods
FBS applies a routing rule that is common in Forex brokerage operations: you withdraw through the same payment system you used to deposit. If you funded the account using multiple payment systems, withdrawals are routed back through those systems in proportion to the deposited amounts.
This rule exists for payment-traceability and anti-fraud controls. In practice, it means:
- If you deposited only by bank card, you should expect the deposit amount to be refunded back to that bank card first.
- If you deposited with a mix (for example, card + e-wallet), withdrawals are split following the deposit proportions.
There are also method-specific restrictions and flows for profits versus deposit refunds, especially for card deposits, which you should understand before you plan a large withdrawal.
Method group one: bank cards (Visa, Mastercard, Maestro)
What card withdrawals are used for
Card withdrawals are the most familiar option for many Forex traders. When card withdrawal is supported for your profile, you can request money back to a supported card network such as Visa, Mastercard, or Maestro (the exact card networks depend on the entity and region).
What FBS requires for card withdrawals
FBS can require card verification steps during withdrawal. In the withdrawal flow, card withdrawals can prompt you to upload the front and back sides of the card as part of the requested information.
How card withdrawals are applied when you made multiple card deposits
If you made multiple deposits by card, FBS structures the refund logic as separate refunds tied to each deposit amount rather than treating them as one combined deposit. A documented example shows the refund order as a sequence by deposit amounts, reflecting separate card deposits.
That matters because if you are trying to withdraw an amount that is smaller than your total card deposits, the system can treat the withdrawal as a partial refund of one of the deposits (instead of pulling a blended amount across all deposits).
Processing time and fees (EU example)
In the European Union context (FBS brand represented by Tradestone Limited), the public withdrawal table shows:
- Card withdrawals with 0% commission listed by the broker side
- A processing window shown as 15–20 minutes (up to 2 days)
- A note that bank processing can take up to 5–7 days
Even when the broker side lists 0% commission, card processors and banks can still apply their own charges or conversion costs depending on your bank and card issuer’s policies. (This is why “0% commission by the broker” is not the same thing as “zero cost end-to-end.”)
Method group two: wire transfer (bank transfer)
What wire transfer withdrawals are used for
Wire transfer is the classic option for moving larger sums to a bank account, especially when you want your Forex trading profits to land directly in the banking system. Wire transfer is also a common “fallback” when certain wallet methods are not supported for your region.
What you enter in a bank withdrawal request
When you choose a bank transfer withdrawal method inside the withdrawal page, you provide bank details requested by the form. The exact fields depend on the banking network and the country (for example, IBAN/SWIFT-style details in some regions and domestic routing details in others). FBS collects the required information in the withdrawal step where it prompts you to “provide the requested information.”
Processing time and fees (EU example)
The EU withdrawal table shows for Wire Transfer:
- Broker-side commission listed as 0%
- A note to find the precise commission amount on the bank’s side
- A broker-side processing time shown as 48 hours
- A note that bank processing can take up to 5–7 days
In other words, the broker can process the request quickly, but the banking rail can add additional time after the broker sends the transfer instruction.
Method group three: e-wallets and online payment providers
Why e-wallet withdrawals matter for Forex traders
E-wallets are popular among Forex traders because they often support faster transfers than traditional banking and can simplify cross-border payments. FBS supports online payment providers and digital wallets, with the specific wallet list varying by country.
Skrill
In the EU withdrawal table, Skrill is listed as a withdrawal method with:
- 0% commission listed by the broker side
- A processing window shown as 15–20 minutes (up to 48 hours)
Neteller
In the EU withdrawal table, Neteller is listed with:
- 0% commission listed by the broker side
- A processing window shown as 15–20 minutes (up to 48 hours)
RAPID Transfer
In the EU withdrawal table, RAPID Transfer is also listed as a withdrawal channel with:
- 0% commission listed by the broker side
- A processing window shown as 15–20 minutes (up to 48 hours)
The “withdrawal without trading” fee note (EU context)
The EU withdrawal page includes a rule statement: some payment methods require a transaction fee when you withdraw funds without trading, and the company reserves the right to impose a 5% fee to any payment method as deemed necessary.
For Forex traders, the practical meaning is simple: if you are using your FBS account like a pass-through wallet (deposit → no trading → withdraw), you can trigger fee controls on certain payment rails in that region.
Method group four: local banks and local payment methods
FBS explicitly positions its funding system around both global and local payment methods, including local banks, with automated withdrawals also described as part of the system.
Local methods are not “one brand.” They are a category. In one country, the local method can be a domestic bank transfer scheme. In another, it can be a region-specific payment network. The key point is that these methods show inside your Withdrawal page when they are supported for your residence profile.
A special routing rule: profit withdrawal after card deposits (policy wording)
A regional terms document describes a routing rule related to profits when deposits were made by card: it states that profit from the card deposit can be withdrawn through a local bank when that local bank withdrawal route is supported and the client has a bank account, and it also describes alternative routing if local bank withdrawal is not present.
For many Forex traders, this explains why “deposit refund” and “profit withdrawal” can follow different rails in some setups: the deposit portion is treated like a refund back to the deposit rail, while profits can be routed through another supported withdrawal channel under the broker’s rules and the payment network constraints.
Security controls used during withdrawals
FBS describes several controls tied to funding security, including:
- Segregated accounts (client funds held separate from company balances)
- One-time password (OTP) verification to safeguard withdrawals
- PCI DSS compliance for card data protection
- 3D Secure for online card payments, using SMS-based authentication
From a Forex trader’s perspective, these controls show up as extra confirmations (like OTP) and occasionally extra documentation steps (like card image upload) when the system needs to verify ownership of a payment instrument.
What determines which withdrawal methods you actually see
FBS states that it provides a wide range of payment methods for deposits and withdrawals and that the set depends on the trader’s country of residence.
So, “FBS withdrawal methods” should be understood like this:
- There is a large catalog (200+ methods).
- Your account displays a subset that is supported for your profile.
- Routing rules (same-method withdrawal, proportional split, deposit refunds) control where money can go.
This is also why the cleanest planning approach is to think in “rails” instead of names: card rails, bank rails, wallet rails, and local rails.
Practical selection guide for Forex traders
If you prioritize speed
E-wallet methods shown in the EU table (Skrill, Neteller, RAPID Transfer) have short processing windows listed (15–20 minutes, up to 48 hours). If these wallets are supported for your profile, they are usually the simplest way to move moderate amounts quickly—especially for active Forex traders who withdraw regularly.
If you prioritize bank-level traceability
Wire transfer is designed for sending money to a bank account and includes a bank-side processing window that can take up to 5–7 days after broker processing. This is a common choice when you want your trading withdrawals to land directly in your bank ledger.
If you want the most direct “refund-style” path
Card withdrawals route money back to the same card rail, and the system can require card image upload during the withdrawal flow. This is often the most straightforward method when your original deposits were done by card and you are withdrawing deposit amounts back.
If your region depends heavily on domestic payments
Local bank and local payment methods are built into the FBS funding setup, and they appear as selectable methods when supported for your residence profile.
Common withdrawal friction points (and what they mean)
“My withdrawal request was reduced”
A documented explanation for card deposits describes how withdrawals can be structured as refunds tied to specific card deposits, including partial refund behavior when the balance is below total card deposits. This is not random—this is how card refund rails work in many payment systems.
“My withdrawal was rejected”
When a withdrawal is rejected, the most common structural reasons in broker systems are: mismatch with the deposit method rule, missing required payment details, or missing verification. FBS places withdrawals inside the verified Trader Area/app flow and explicitly connects funding functionality to verification levels in its educational materials.
“I haven’t received my card withdrawal yet”
Even when broker-side processing is fast, card and bank rails can add time. The EU withdrawal table explicitly separates broker processing windows from bank processing that can take up to 5–7 days.
FBS supports a broad set of withdrawal methods (200+ payment methods across deposits and withdrawals) and presents the methods inside your account based on your country profile. Withdrawals are initiated in the Trader Area or the FBS app, and the routing is governed by a same-method rule with proportional splitting when multiple deposit methods were used. Card withdrawals operate like structured refunds (with card verification steps in some cases), wire transfers route to bank accounts with bank-side processing time, and e-wallet methods (such as Skrill, Neteller, and RAPID Transfer in the EU table) are designed for faster electronic payouts.
FBS fund deposit methods and fund security for Forex trading
Funding a Forex trading account sounds simple—pick a method, send money, place trades. In real trading, deposits are part of your risk process. The method you choose affects speed, fees, currency handling, and how easily your funds move between your bank, your wallet, and your trading balance. With FBS, deposits are designed to be fast and flexible, with a large menu of payment rails that includes local banks and major international payment systems.
At the same time, a deposit system is only as good as the controls behind it. FBS states that client funds are kept in segregated accounts, withdrawals are protected with OTP verification, card payments are supported by PCI DSS controls, and 3D Secure authentication is used for online card transactions. These are practical safeguards that reduce fraud risks and reduce the chance of unauthorized transactions.
How deposits work at FBS
Deposits are initiated inside the Trader Area on the website or inside the FBS mobile app. The process follows a standard flow:
- Open Finances and choose Deposit
- Select a payment system from the list shown for your profile
- Select the trading account to fund
- Enter the required payment details (wallet account details, card details, or bank data depending on method)
- Enter the amount and select the currency
- Confirm the deposit
- Track status in Transaction History
FBS also frames account setup as a short sequence: registration and verification, then deposit, then market access through the app or MetaTrader. In other words, deposit access is tied to account verification as part of the platform’s standard onboarding logic.
Another important point: the payment method list you see inside your deposit page is not identical for every trader. FBS provides a large catalog of payment methods, and the deposit page displays the methods that match your country and profile settings.
The main FBS deposit method categories
FBS supports deposits through three big channels:
- Bank cards
- Bank transfers and local bank methods
- Online payment providers and digital wallets
FBS describes its funding network as “global and local payment methods,” and it also states that it supports 200+ payment providers / payment methods.
Below is what each channel means in real Forex account funding.
Depositing by bank card
What “bank card deposit” means
A bank card deposit is a direct funding transaction using a card network supported in your region. In the EU-facing FBS funding table, card options include Visa/Mastercard-style rails and also Maestro in the listed options.
Why Forex traders use card deposits
Bank card deposits are popular because they are simple, familiar, and often quick. When a card deposit is approved, your trading balance updates and can be used to open positions, meet margin requirements, and handle spread and commission costs as you trade.
Security layer on card deposits: 3D Secure
For online card transactions, FBS states it uses 3D Secure payments with SMS code authentication, so card transactions require an extra authorization step tied to the cardholder. This reduces the risk of unauthorized use of card details.
Card data protection: PCI DSS
FBS states it complies with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) to reduce card fraud and secure cardholder data. This matters if you fund your Forex account by card because it addresses how cardholder data is handled and protected in payment flows.
Depositing by bank transfer and local banks
Bank transfer deposits
A bank transfer deposit moves funds from a bank account to your trading account through a bank-to-bank rail. Bank transfers are widely used for larger funding amounts or when a trader prefers banking rails over wallets.
FBS’s own description of deposits includes local banks as a supported funding channel.
Processing time structure
For bank transfers, processing is shaped by the banking network. FBS states most deposits are processed instantly, and that if you use a bank transfer the time depends on your bank.
In the EU-facing funding table, wire transfer deposits are shown with a multi-day processing time window, reflecting typical bank transfer handling rather than instant wallet-style crediting.
Local bank methods
FBS also supports deposit methods described as local bank funding. This is not a single payment brand; it is a category that covers country-specific banking rails and local online banking systems that appear on the deposit page when supported for your profile. The Help Center even splits deposit instructions into method types such as “deposit via local bank,” showing that local bank rails are treated as a distinct funding workflow inside the platform.
Depositing through online payment providers and digital wallets
What “online payment providers” means at FBS
FBS explicitly includes “various online payment providers” as a deposit channel. In its own education content, examples include Neteller and PerfectMoney alongside bank cards and local banks.
These are not bank transfers. They are payment networks that connect to your wallet or provider account and credit your trading balance after confirmation.
Common wallet-style deposit options shown in FBS materials
Across FBS pages and funding tables, you see recurring wallet/provider options such as:
- Neteller
- Skrill
- RAPID Transfer
- Perfect Money
These method names are not guaranteed for every profile, because the deposit page is region-dependent. The consistent rule is that FBS supports a broad set of providers and shows the supported set inside your deposit screen.
Why Forex traders use wallets
Wallets are used for speed and convenience. If you actively trade Forex, you may need to add margin quickly to avoid stop-out during volatility, or you may want the fastest path from wallet balance to trading balance. Wallet rails are designed for this style of funding.
How minimum deposit can vary by method
FBS states the minimum deposit to trade is $5, and it also states minimum deposit can vary by payment system, giving method examples such as Neteller, Skrill, and Perfect Money with different minimum values.
This is how deposits work in real payment ecosystems: each payment system has its own limits, risk controls, and cost structure, and the broker’s deposit page reflects those method-specific rules.
Fees, commission, and what “0% commission” means
FBS states it does not charge additional deposit fees or commissions, and it also states that some payment providers charge a commission but FBS compensates the commission so deposits with most providers are free for clients.
On the FBS trading conditions page, funding is also positioned as “commission not charged by FBS” and “200+ deposit and withdrawal methods.”
In some regions (such as the EU-facing funding page), deposit options are displayed with “0% commission” for listed rails like card, Skrill, and RAPID Transfer, while bank transfer includes a note pointing to bank-side costs.
For Forex traders, the practical interpretation is:
- FBS does not add its own extra deposit fee on the transaction layer.
- A payment provider or bank can still apply its own fees depending on the rail, currency conversion, and account conditions.
That distinction matters because it separates broker pricing policy from banking and wallet network pricing.
Currency handling: deposits in local currency
FBS states you can use your local currency to make a deposit.
For Forex traders, this matters because:
- Your bank or wallet balance may be in your local currency
- Your trading account currency may be different
- The deposit flow can include conversion at the payment rail level or at the broker’s funding infrastructure level depending on the method
The deposit screen shows the currency selection step as part of the deposit flow (enter amount, choose currency, confirm).
Verification and transaction access
FBS connects funding access to verification in two clear ways:
- It markets “unlimited transactions after full verification,” indicating verification status affects funding limits.
- Its onboarding model presents verification before deposit as part of the standard start sequence.
In practice, this means that funding limits and transaction frequency depend on whether the account has completed the platform’s verification requirements.
Fund security at FBS: what the safeguards are and what they do
Fund security is not a single feature. It is a stack of controls: where client money is held, how withdrawals are authorized, how payment data is protected, and how platform security is maintained.
Segregated accounts
FBS states it keeps traders’ funds in insured accounts at multiple tier-1 banks, separate from company balances. This is the classic segregation structure used in brokerage operations to separate client money from operational funds.
Secure withdrawals with OTP
FBS states it safeguards withdrawals with one-time password (OTP) verification methods. OTP is a practical barrier against unauthorized withdrawals because a withdrawal request requires a confirmation step that is not just a password.
Even though this article focuses on deposits, withdrawal security matters for deposits too. A deposit is only “safe” if the exit path is protected.
PCI DSS controls
FBS states it complies with PCI DSS to reduce card fraud and protect cardholder data. PCI DSS is a payment security standard for organizations that store, process, or transmit card data, and compliance is a baseline requirement for reducing exposure to card data compromise.
3D Secure with SMS authentication
FBS states it provides extra security with SMS code authentication for online card transactions using 3D Secure, so only the cardholder can authorize those transactions. This directly targets common card fraud patterns where stolen card details are used without the cardholder’s real-time approval.
Platform security and vulnerability scanning
FBS states it performs external vulnerability scans using ASV (Approved Scanning Vendors) as part of its security measures to protect client data and ensure transaction safety while using its services.
For a Forex trading account, platform security supports deposit security indirectly: if the account access layer is protected and monitored, it reduces the chance of unauthorized account takeover that could lead to funding abuse or withdrawal attempts.
How deposits and security connect in real Forex trading
It is easy to treat deposits as an administrative step. In active Forex trading, deposits interact with:
- Margin and leverage: deposits support margin requirements; account equity determines how much exposure you can hold at any time.
- Volatility management: fast deposit rails help when you need to add margin during market movement.
- Cost control: if deposits are free on the broker side, the main variable is the payment rail’s conversion and fee structure.
- Account protection: OTP on withdrawals and card authentication reduce the chance that funded accounts become targets.
FBS presents a package that includes deposit access, broad payment coverage, and layered security controls: segregated accounts, OTP, PCI DSS, and 3D Secure.
Practical deposit planning for Forex traders using FBS
Choose your funding rail based on trading style
- If you prefer speed for active Forex trading, online payment providers and wallet rails are designed for quick account crediting.
- If you prioritize bank ledger traceability and larger transfers, bank transfer rails support that structure, with processing time driven by the banking system.
- If you want a familiar retail payment option, card deposits combine speed with 3D Secure authentication and PCI DSS handling controls.
Expect method-specific limits
FBS uses method-dependent deposit limits and minimums, and it states minimum deposit varies by payment system.
Use Transaction History as the record of funding actions
FBS states the status of financial requests is monitored in Transaction History, which acts as your internal ledger for deposits (and withdrawals) at the account level.
FBS provides account funding through bank cards, local banks and bank transfers, and a broad set of online payment providers and digital wallet rails. Deposits are placed inside the Trader Area or app through the Finances → Deposit flow, with currency selection and method-specific required information. FBS states it supports 200+ payment methods/providers and structures funding so deposits are generally processed fast, with bank transfers driven by bank processing.
On fund security, FBS states client money is held in segregated insured accounts at multiple tier-1 banks, withdrawals are protected with OTP verification, card payments are protected through PCI DSS controls, and online card payments use 3D Secure with SMS authentication. It also states it performs external vulnerability scans to strengthen protection around transactions and client data.
Please check FBS official website or contact the customer support with regard to the latest information and more accurate details.
Please click "Introduction of FBS", if you want to know the details and the company information of FBS.


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