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How to Make International Payment?

Making an international payment means sending money from your country to a recipient abroad—for invoices, tuition, family support, or online purchases. In 2026 you can pay via bank SWIFT wires, fintech apps like Wise, digital wallets such as PayPal, card networks, or remittance brands like Western Union. The best method depends on amount, speed, total cost (fees + FX), and how the recipient needs to receive funds.

What is an international payment?

Cross-border payments move value across currencies and banking systems. Unlike domestic ACH or UPI transfers, international sends usually involve currency conversion, intermediary banks, and compliance checks (KYC/AML). Payers may be individuals, small businesses paying overseas suppliers, or finance teams running global AP. Recipients might need money in a local bank account, a mobile wallet, or cash pickup. Choosing the right rail upfront avoids delays, returned wires, and hidden FX spreads.

Main ways to pay internationally

Compare options on total landed cost and recipient experience:

  • Bank SWIFT wire: reliable for large B2B; 2–5+ business days; requires IBAN/account, SWIFT/BIC, and sometimes intermediary bank details.
  • Wise (TransferWise) and similar fintech: strong for SMB and personal transfers; often transparent FX near mid-market.
  • PayPal / digital wallets: convenient for smaller online payments when both parties use the platform.
  • Cards: fast for merchants; FX and cross-border fees apply; good for ecommerce, less ideal for large supplier wires.
  • Western Union / MoneyGram: cash pickup and agent networks in corridors where banking is limited.
  • SEPA / local instant schemes (regional): low-cost within Europe or linked corridors where available.
Secure international online payment and card processing
Global banking and cross-border wire transfer

Step-by-step: bank wire (SWIFT)

Most businesses still use wires for high-value international payments:

  • Collect beneficiary legal name, address, account number/IBAN, bank name, and SWIFT/BIC code; confirm any intermediary bank for USD/EUR routes.
  • Specify who pays fees: SHA (shared), OUR (sender pays all), or BEN (beneficiary pays)—this affects what the recipient receives.
  • Enter payment reference matching invoice or contract; mismatches can delay clearance.
  • Submit before your bank’s cut-off time; weekends and holidays add delay.
  • Save SWIFT confirmation (MT103 or tracking reference) and share with the recipient for reconciliation.

Step-by-step: online platforms (Wise, PayPal, etc.)

For many personal and SMB payments, fintech apps are faster to set up than wires: verify your identity, link a bank account or debit card, enter recipient details (email for PayPal, local bank details for Wise), review the fee and exchange rate breakdown, and confirm. Platforms show estimated arrival time—often same day to 48 hours depending on corridor. For business use, enable business profiles, collect invoices, and export statements for accounting. Always compare the all-in amount the recipient gets versus a wire quote on large transfers.

Fees, FX, and speed to compare

  • Transfer fee: flat or percentage—shown upfront on good platforms.
  • FX margin: difference from mid-market rate; major hidden cost on cards and some banks.
  • Correspondent bank deductions: possible on SWIFT if fee instruction is SHA/BEN.
  • Speed: instant–minutes (some fintech/card) vs several days (classic SWIFT).
  • Limits: daily/monthly caps until KYC tier increases.
Mobile app for international money transfer and digital wallet

Security and compliance tips

International payments are targets for fraud. Verify beneficiary details through a second channel before first-time large sends. Be wary of changed wire instructions on email—call the vendor on a known number. Use regulated providers licensed in your jurisdiction. Businesses should align payments with sanctions screening and record-keeping. Individuals sending from countries with capital controls (including India’s LRS rules) must follow local limits and purpose codes—see country-specific guides for details.

Trends in cross-border payments (2026)

Payment infrastructure continues to shift toward API-first treasury tools, embedded FX in ERP and accounting software, and faster regional rails linked across borders (pilot programs and fintech partnerships). Real-time gross settlement networks and ISO 20022 messaging improve tracking on many bank wires. Stablecoins and blockchain corridors exist for niche use cases but most regulated businesses still default to bank and licensed fintech rails for auditability. Regulators worldwide emphasize AML, travel rule compliance, and consumer disclosure on remittance fees—expect more transparency, not less paperwork, on high-value or first-time routes.

Which method should you choose?

Common mistakes to avoid

Conclusion

Making international payments is straightforward when you match the method to amount, urgency, and recipient setup—and when you compare all-in cost, not just the visible fee. Start with verified beneficiary details, pick SWIFT for large business flows or regulated fintech for speed and transparency on smaller sends, and keep confirmations for tax and audit records. Rules vary by country, so confirm local outbound limits and reporting before you send.

Additional resources