Converting Euro's
Author
Discussion

MyM2006

Original Poster:

294 posts

169 months

Monday 11th May
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We've got about 250K in euros in our Barclays business currency account, was originally from a sale and was supposed to be reinvested. Now due to a change in circumstances we are looking to change this into GBP, whats the best way to get the optimal currency conversion rate on this sort of amount?

alfabeat

1,444 posts

137 months

Friday 15th May
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Wise are good for large currency exchanges with good exchange rates and fees. Very easy to set up.

WH16

8,140 posts

243 months

Friday 15th May
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^^^ Yeah, I put a fair bit through Wise every year. Not sure what their single-conversion limit is but the rates are good and fees much lower than the high-street equivalent.

Big E 118

2,468 posts

194 months

Tuesday
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www.misanopayments.com

This guy is a PH'er. I've not used him yet but have had a couple of convo's over email about a future transaction. Rates seemed very fair.


Cupid-stunt

3,270 posts

81 months

Tuesday
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Big E 118 said:
www.misanopayments.com

This guy is a PH'er. I've not used him yet but have had a couple of convo's over email about a future transaction. Rates seemed very fair.
Have used him and was as good as Wise - so gave the business to a fellow PH'er.

Geoffcapes

1,193 posts

189 months

Wednesday
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Open a Monzo (or similar such account) and transfer it into there.

You can transfer it into sterling or whatever currency at the daily rate.

Shnozz

30,262 posts

296 months

Wednesday
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Wise or Revolut for me. I do conversions monthly but used Wise when I was transferring a similar figure to yours for a house purchase.

RizzoTheRat

28,429 posts

217 months

Wednesday
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Geoffcapes said:
Open a Monzo (or similar such account) and transfer it into there.

You can transfer it into sterling or whatever currency at the daily rate.
With Revolut, who also operate like that, there's a limit to how much you can transfer per day depending on the "level" of the account you have, with higher levels costing more. The free one is about 1k/month and then you pay 1% on transfers above that, so it's well worth paying for the more expensive account if you want to transfer larger amounts. I'd guess that Monzo and other similar banks have operate in similar ways.


Living in the EU, most of my British colleagues who transfer money back to the UK tend to either use Wise for large amounts or free versions of Revolut or similar accounts to move small amounts.