Electroencephalogram (EEG) signal contains important information about abnormal brain activity, which has become an important basis for epilepsy diagnosis. Recently, epilepsy EEG signal classification methods mainly extract features from the perspective of a single domain, which cannot effectively utilize the spatial domain information in EEG signals. The redundant information in EEG signals will affect the learning features with the increase of convolution layer and multi-domain features, resulting in inefficient learning and a lack of distinguishing features. To tackle these issues, we propose an end-to-end 3D convolutional multiband seizure-type classification model based on attention mechanisms. Specifically, to process preprocessed electroencephalogram (EEG) data, a multilevel wavelet decomposition is applied to obtain the joint distribution information in the two-dimensional time–frequency domain across multiple frequency bands. Subsequently, this information is transformed into three-dimensional spatial data based on the electrode configuration. Discriminative joint activity features in the time, frequency, and spatial domains are then extracted by a series of parallel 3D convolutional sub-networks, where 3D channels and spatial attention mechanisms improve the ability to learn critical global and local information. A multi-layer perceptron is finally implemented to integrate the extracted features and further map them to the classification results. Experimental results on the TUSZ dataset, the world’s largest publicly available seizure corpus, show that 3D-CBAMNet significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art methods, indicating effectiveness in the seizure type classification task.