VoPay applies a three-day hold on PAD and ACH payments to allow banks time to confirm funds have cleared. This safeguard helps prevent reversals, reduce payment risks, and ensure compliance with Payments Canada and NACHA regulations.
When you process a Pre-Authorized Debit (PAD) or EFT Payment through VoPay, funds are held for three (3) business days before being released. This waiting period allows the payer’s bank to confirm whether the debit has cleared successfully or has been returned due to issues such as Non-Sufficient Funds (NSF), invalid account, or unauthorized transactions.
This process follows standard clearing rules established by:
A PAD or ACH debit is the electronic equivalent of a cheque deposit — the difference is that it’s entirely digital.
When a PAD is initiated:
The 3-day hold period gives banks time to process and respond to the debit file. This safeguard allows VoPay to:
It’s similar to how a deposited cheque is shown as “pending” until the funds clear.
| Region | Network Regulator | Typical Return Window | Common Return Reasons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Payments Canada (PAD) | Up to 3 business days for standard returns | NSF, invalid account, closed account, payment stopped |
| United States | NACHA (ACH) | Typically 2 banking days from settlement for standard returns; up to 60 days for unauthorized consumer debits | NSF, account closed, invalid account, unauthorized debit |
The three-day hold period is an industry-standard practice designed to protect all parties by ensuring that funds have fully cleared the payer’s bank. This approach minimizes reversal risk, improves reconciliation accuracy, and maintains compliance with both Payments Canada and NACHA frameworks.
Q: Why can’t VoPay confirm immediately if the funds have cleared?
A: The clearing process depends on each bank’s return-file schedule. Most NSF or invalid-account returns arrive within 2–3 business days.
Q: Can returns still occur after three days?
A: Yes, in limited cases (e.g., unauthorized consumer debits in the U.S.)—up to 60 days per NACHA rules.
Q: Do all banks send return files at the same time?
A: No. Some banks submit return files overnight; others batch them throughout the day. VoPay reconciles these automatically as they arrive.
Q: Will this policy change when real-time payments expand?
A: As faster payment rails become more common, VoPay plans to align hold times accordingly while maintaining compliance safeguards.
Last updated: October 2025
Applies to: PAD (Canada) | ACH (U.S.)
Author: VoPay Compliance & Operations Team
EFT stands for Electronic Funds Transfer and is the backbone of the Canadian payment industry. EFT offers a safe and cost-effective way to electronically credit or debit accounts at any Canadian financial institution in Canadian or U.S. dollars.
An EFT return code occurs when an EFT payment is unsuccessful, and each specific code will refer to the reason for the failure.
EFT reversals are when a payment is reversed due to issues such as incorrect payment details or customer disputes.
Bulk EFT payments refer to processing Canadian bank account transactions in bulk in order to optimize payment operations at scale.
The EFT CPA 005 file format is a Canadian formatting standard for generating electronic funds transfer files.
EFT cut-off times refer to the deadlines set by financial institutions for processing EFT transactions.
An EFT API integration connects a business’s software infrastructure to an EFT payment gateway, enabling programmatic access to EFT payment processing.
EFT payments and wire transfers are two different types of electronic transactions, each with its own pros and cons.
Speak to a Fintech Advisor to outline your needs and impact plan.
Start testing in the VoPay sandbox to explore our advanced API functions.
Our compliance and onboarding team will guide you through the process.
Choose a production date and launch your integration with confidence!
We are happy to answer your questions. Fill out the form and we will have one of our team members contact you.