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Money transfer question...
I'm having some money transferred to my bank here in Canada. Is it better to have the money kept in pounds or have it converted to dollars before it leaves the UK? I'm not really sure of the implications either way. Any help would be appreciated.
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Re: Money transfer question...
Originally Posted by sijamie
(Post 11076256)
I'm having some money transferred to my bank here in Canada. Is it better to have the money kept in pounds or have it converted to dollars before it leaves the UK? I'm not really sure of the implications either way. Any help would be appreciated.
Unless you are keeping it in GBP, the only difference will be the FX and the only folks who can give you accurate rates are your bank. The rate will also vary depending on your account type and negotiating skills. |
Re: Money transfer question...
When MoneyCorp did it for me the other way (Canada to UK) they just gave me a promise of a fixed amount and then took care of everything else and it actually took less than 24 hours in total.
I believe transferring a foreign currency into a normal UK account will incur charges at the receiving end and considering how greedy and backward the Canadian banks are, I can only imagine those charges being amplified if you're receiving there. |
Re: Money transfer question...
Originally Posted by DigitalGhost
(Post 11076352)
I believe transferring a foreign currency into a normal UK account will incur charges at the receiving end and considering how greedy and backward the Canadian banks are, I can only imagine those charges being amplified if you're receiving there.
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Re: Money transfer question...
We use Halo to tranfer money across if that helps! :)
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Re: Money transfer question...
Originally Posted by MarkG
(Post 11076553)
My experience is precisely the opposite; I've paid small UK cheques into my bank here and actually had some money at the end of it, whereas it was hardly worth paying small Canadian cheques into my UK bank because the charges would swallow it all.
Really does not matter who you use as an FX house, as long as they are reputable, the rates are going to be pretty even, especially if you negotiate a bit. Some charge a separate fee, some build it into the FX rate. There is no such thing as a fee free transaction, somewhere you pay for it. Banks and FX houses are in it for the money, not our benefit. |
Re: Money transfer question...
Originally Posted by sijamie
(Post 11076256)
I'm having some money transferred to my bank here in Canada. Is it better to have the money kept in pounds or have it converted to dollars before it leaves the UK? I'm not really sure of the implications either way. Any help would be appreciated.
And yes, these transfer services are (generally), have used xe.com, which now belongs to Western Union (and not- coincidentally, is no longer as price competitive as it used to be :rolleyes:) to transfer amounts of $00's, $000's, ..... and, on one occasion, the net proceeds of the sale of my house! |
Re: Money transfer question...
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 11076926)
Do not use your bank to transfer the funds. You'll get charged wire fees at both ends, and get a cräppy FX rate to boot.
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Re: Money transfer question...
I'm doing a transfer right now with Excel Currencies (see their forum section a bit lower down on BE). I'll let you know how I get on! So far they've been very helpful, and competitive!
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Re: Money transfer question...
We used Oanda, really simple and straight forward. Transfers up to 100k (can't remember which currency) are also protected during the time they are in-transit. There are fees but they're fixed, so if you're transferring large amounts then the relative percentage is pretty low. They were reliable, and the transfer protection was valuable to us.
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