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Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
I'm looking for a Canadian Bank that offers a British Pound account (not HSBC). I read something about TD having one that is somewhat hidden and that the tellers won't know about it and that a manager might have to call up the line of command to find out about it? Does anyone have any info about this please?
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Re: Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
You can deposit a british pound cheque into any bank account in Canada, or transfer funds into one from the UK - or get a transferwise borderless account (and keep a UK bank account!). Is there a specific reason you need a BP account?
Many of the banks have foreign currency accounts :) https://www.rbcroyalbank.com/busines...-currency.html https://www.nbc.ca/business/internat...-accounts.html https://www.bmo.com/home/commercial/...iness-globally https://www.tdcanadatrust.com/docume...nts/513796.pdf (opens in new tab) page 5 |
Re: Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
Originally Posted by Siouxie
(Post 12946068)
You can deposit a british pound cheque into any bank account in Canada, or transfer funds into one from the UK - or get a transferwise borderless account (and keep a UK bank account!). Is there a specific reason you need a BP account?
Many of the banks have foreign currency accounts :) https://www.rbcroyalbank.com/busines...-currency.html https://www.nbc.ca/business/internat...-accounts.html https://www.bmo.com/home/commercial/...iness-globally https://www.tdcanadatrust.com/docume...nts/513796.pdf (opens in new tab) page 5 I am receiving an inheritance. I want the funds in BP and thus want a bank that offers a BP account. I don't qualify for a HSBC account as I no longer have a UK address. I won't be using a bank to convert the funds into CDN and want to hang onto some till the exchange is more in my favour as it sucks right now. I hear the TD has such an account but is "hidden" and the tellers won't know about it. I could not get your link to open however. |
Re: Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
I don't think HSBC requires you to have a UK address in order to open a GBP account in Canada.
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Re: Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
Originally Posted by tweed_wearer
(Post 12946089)
I don't think HSBC requires you to have a UK address in order to open a GBP account in Canada.
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Re: Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
Originally Posted by Canada Goose
(Post 12946079)
Thanks for your reply.
I am receiving an inheritance. I want the funds in BP and thus want a bank that offers a BP account. I don't qualify for a HSBC account as I no longer have a UK address. I won't be using a bank to convert the funds into CDN and want to hang onto some till the exchange is more in my favour as it sucks right now. I hear the TD has such an account but is "hidden" and the tellers won't know about it. I could not get your link to open however. TD do have an account - I would suggest that you make an appointment (phone or video) with a customer service advisor at your local branch - no point in going to see a teller at the front desk, they won't have a clue. Page 5 of the pdf - no idea why it won't open for you - I only have to click on it for it to open in a new tab (firefox on desktop) https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/british...055fd252c0.jpg |
Re: Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
HSBC has 3 types of BP accounts, the basic one requires a UK address. The two higher and more premium accounts I do not qualify for money wise lol.
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Re: Looking for Canadian Bank with BP Account (not HSBC)
Originally Posted by Siouxie
(Post 12946106)
You will need to convert the funds to Canadian at some point - and the banks generally offer reasonable rates, unlike transfer services (other than Transferwise, who gave me a slightly better rate than the bank!). You can ask the executor of the estate to make scheduled payments over the course of the year, perhaps - so it's not in one lump sum. A Transferwise borderless account may be best for this for you - you can hold the funds in the account and transfer them when the rate improves. Do bear in mind that you could be taxed on the difference in value from date of inheritance to date of receipt in Canadian funds; while inheritances are not liable for taxes, any increase in the value of them could be, so if it's a significant amount you mght want to have an informal chat with a tax expert/accountant... and you will need to disclose it even if it's overseas (world income) and valued at $100,000 or more.
TD do have an account - I would suggest that you make an appointment (phone or video) with a customer service advisor at your local branch - no point in going to see a teller at the front desk, they won't have a clue. Page 5 of the pdf - no idea why it won't open for you - I only have to click on it for it to open in a new tab (firefox on desktop) https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/british...055fd252c0.jpg |
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