Bank wires cost $30โ50 flat per transfer. PayPal silently takes 2โ3% in FX markup. Even Wise fees start compounding when you send money weekly. 72 expats on Reddit tested every alternative. Here's what actually works โ with real numbers, not theory.
Most fee comparisons assume you're doing one big annual transfer. But if you're paying rent abroad, supporting family, or running a business across borders, you're sending money weekly or monthly โ and the math looks completely different.
Take a $200 transfer, done weekly:
"Been sending smaller amounts internationally pretty regularly and the fees are starting to add up in a way that is hard to ignore. Bank wires take days and the fees make no sense for smaller amounts โ paying a flat $30 to $50 on a $200 transfer is just not a viable setup when you are doing it frequently."
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Open CalculatorWise is the most recommended option in the thread by a wide margin. The key insight most people miss: how you fund the transfer matters more than the visible fee.
"Wise fee shifts a lot depending on how you fund it. Paying with a card tacks on a couple % extra, bank transfer (ACH/SEPA) is way cheaper. On small amounts that's where most of the leak is, not the visible fee."
๐ก Wise hack: Always fund via bank transfer, not card. And if you can batch weekly sends into monthly ones, the per-transfer fee disappears from the equation โ only the percentage rate matters.
Several users specifically recommended Revolut for frequent small transfers. The free tier gives a monthly currency exchange allowance with no fee. Paid tiers remove the cap entirely.
"Revolut is worth a serious look for your use case specifically. The free tier gives you a monthly allowance of fee-free currency exchange up to a limit, and paid tiers remove that cap entirely. For frequent small amounts it often works out cheaper than Wise in practice."
This is the most surprising finding from the thread: using a US brokerage account (Fidelity or Schwab) to send money internationally for essentially free. Here's how it works:
"I buy euros and hold them in my brokerage account. When I need them in my European account, I wire them as Euros. I've already paid the exchange rate conversion, and there is no wire fee."
โ ๏ธ Tax note: If you buy and then sell foreign currency without spending it, that's treated like a stock trade for US tax purposes. Buying and wiring directly to spend is generally not taxable. Always confirm with a tax professional.
Schwab gives 3 free international wire transfers per quarter (the $15 fee is charged and then immediately refunded). For users not sending more than 12 times a year, this is essentially free.
"Charles Schwab gives me 3 free wire transfers per quarter."
For certain routes, specialist apps consistently beat both Wise and Revolut. The key is comparing the final amount received, not the advertised fee โ FX spread is where the real cost often hides.
| Corridor | Worth Testing | Why |
|---|---|---|
| US โ Philippines | Sendwave, Remitly | Often better rate than Wise on this route |
| US โ Mexico | Monex USA, Remitly | Forex dealers can beat fintech on large amounts |
| US โ Ukraine | Paysend | $1.99 flat fee, card-to-card in minutes |
| US/EU โ India | Wise, Remitly | Competitive mid-market rate |
| Any โ Any (crypto ok) | USDC on Base network | ~0.5% total, 10 min, but off-ramp required |
"A lot of regular senders end up keeping 2โ3 apps and comparing the final amount received each time rather than looking at the fee alone. The real hidden cost is usually the FX spread, not the visible fee. That's why 'zero fee' options aren't always cheapest in practice."
Based on the thread consensus, here's what actually works for different use cases:
| Situation | Best Option | Annual Cost (on $200/week) |
|---|---|---|
| Can batch into monthly sends | Wise (ACH funding) | ~$47/year |
| US-based, <12 transfers/year | Schwab free wires | ~$0 |
| EU-based, high frequency | Revolut Metal/Ultra | ~$0 after subscription |
| Large amounts, patient | Fidelity brokerage wire | ~$0 + FX spread |
| Specific corridors (PH, MX, UA) | Corridor app (Sendwave, Paysend) | Often beats all the above |
๐ก The real insight: There's no universally cheapest option. Pricing changes by corridor, amount, and funding method. Regular senders should compare the final amount received across 2โ3 apps each time โ not just look at the advertised fee.
For most expats doing frequent international transfers in 2026:
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