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Wise: International Transfers

4.6
CategoryFinance
Download50M+
PriceFree app
RatedEveryone
RequiresAndroid 9.0+
DeveloperWise

Screenshots

Wise: International Transfers screenshot
Wise: International Transfers screenshot
Wise: International Transfers screenshot
Wise: International Transfers screenshot
Wise: International Transfers screenshot
Wise: International Transfers screenshot

About this app

Every currency conversion in Wise happens at the mid-market rate — the same midpoint you see on Google or Reuters — with the fee itemised separately before you commit. That single design decision built the company's reputation. Founded as TransferWise and now listed on the London Stock Exchange, Wise moves money across borders for a stated upfront cost rather than hiding its margin inside a padded exchange rate, which is the trick many banks and airport kiosks still rely on.

The app has since grown into a multi-currency account: you can hold dozens of currencies at once, receive local account details in several major ones, and spend abroad on a debit card that converts at that same transparent rate. One thing it is not, in most countries, is a bank. Wise operates as a regulated e-money institution, and that distinction changes how your money is protected — we explain the difference below.

Sending money to family abroad

Regular remittances are where the pricing model pays off most visibly. The app quotes the exact amount arriving before you pay, shows a comparison against typical bank costs, and gives a delivery estimate — many popular routes complete within hours, some within seconds.

Getting paid across borders

Freelancers and remote workers can receive local account details for currencies such as USD, EUR, and GBP, so a US client pays a domestic transfer even though you live elsewhere. Converting to your home currency then happens on your schedule, at the mid-market rate.

Travelling without exchange-rate anxiety

The Wise debit card spends whatever currency you hold and auto-converts the rest with a small stated fee. Compared with a typical bank card's foreign-transaction markup, savings on a long trip are real, and the app shows the exact rate applied to each purchase.

Mid-market rate with itemised fees

Fees vary by currency route and payment method, but the structure never changes: the interbank rate, a separately displayed charge, and a guaranteed rate window for many transfers. Nothing about pricing is buried in the rate itself, which remains rare in this industry.

Multi-currency balances

Hold and convert between dozens of currencies inside one account, with local receiving details available for a selection of major ones. For anyone living across two countries, this replaces the awkward pair of bank accounts that used to be the only option.

Transparent transfer tracking

Each transfer shows its status, the steps remaining, and an estimated arrival time, and the app notifies both ends when money lands. When a route is slow or a document check is needed, the app says so rather than leaving the payment in limbo.

Account security controls

Two-factor authentication protects sign-in and payments, card controls let you freeze the card or restrict online use instantly, and new devices require re-verification. Business and personal profiles stay separate under one login.

Privacy & Data Safety

As a regulated money-transfer service, Wise must verify who you are: expect to upload identity documents, and sometimes proof of address or source of funds for larger amounts. Transaction data is retained and screened to meet anti-money-laundering law — that is a legal obligation, not a choice. Wise has no advertising business built on your data, and no major customer data breach is publicly associated with the service.

  • Identity verification is mandatory before you can transfer meaningful amounts; occasional document re-checks on large transfers are normal and legally driven.
  • In most markets Wise is an e-money institution, so customer funds are safeguarded — held separately at large banks or in liquid assets — rather than covered by deposit-insurance schemes such as FSCS or standard FDIC protection.
  • Transfer histories are kept for years under financial-record regulations, so this is not a service where data deletion on request applies to transaction records.
  • Sign-in supports two-factor authentication, and payment approvals happen in-app; Wise will not ask for your password by phone, a fact worth remembering given impersonation scams around transfer services.

Advantages

  • Genuine mid-market exchange rates with every fee stated before you pay
  • Multi-currency account with local receiving details replaces overseas bank accounts for many users
  • Fast delivery on popular routes, with honest estimates when routes are slow
  • Clean, focused app with none of the upsell clutter common in finance apps

Updates

Wise updates the Android app frequently, usually every couple of weeks, and most changes are incremental: new currency routes, faster payment rails, and interface refinement. Because pricing and delivery speed are largely server-side, the experience improves between updates too — but security fixes and new verification flows ship in the APK, so staying current still matters for an app holding money.

  • Speed improvements as more routes move to instant payment rails
  • Expansion of card features and spending insights across more countries
  • Interest-earning and balance features rolling out market by market, each with its own protection terms

Editor's Assessment

Our verdict

For moving money between currencies, Wise is the app we compare everything else against: the pricing is honest, the tracking is clear, and the multi-currency account solves a problem banks ignored for decades. Understand what it is not — a deposit-insured bank — and size your held balances accordingly. Keep long-term savings in an actual bank, run your cross-border life through Wise, and check its quote against one or two rivals on your specific route, since no service wins every corridor.

What works

  • Genuine mid-market exchange rates with every fee stated before you pay
  • Multi-currency account with local receiving details replaces overseas bank accounts for many users
  • Fast delivery on popular routes, with honest estimates when routes are slow
  • Clean, focused app with none of the upsell clutter common in finance apps

What to know

  • Not a bank in most markets — safeguarding is weaker than deposit insurance if the institution itself failed
  • Verification and compliance checks can freeze a transfer for days at exactly the wrong moment
  • Fees, while transparent, are not always the absolute cheapest on every route
  • Cash pickup and cash funding are largely absent, unlike traditional remittance services

FAQ

Is Wise a bank, and is my money protected?

In most countries Wise is a licensed e-money institution, not a bank. Customer funds are safeguarded — kept separate from company money in major banks or low-risk assets — which protects you if Wise fails, but it is not the same guarantee as FSCS or FDIC deposit insurance. Balances also earn nothing by default unless you opt into specific features.

How much does a Wise transfer cost?

There is no single answer: the fee depends on the currency pair, the amount, and how you pay, with bank-funded transfers cheaper than card-funded ones. What is constant is presentation — the app shows the full fee and the exact amount the recipient gets before you confirm, so you can compare against alternatives in seconds.

Why is Wise asking for my documents?

Money-transfer companies are legally required to verify identity and, for larger sums, the source of the money. Uploading a passport or driving licence at sign-up is standard, and an occasional request for a bank statement on a big transfer is compliance at work, not a sign of a problem with your account.

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