You're paying $30 to wire $200. Wise compounds its fees every time you send. Banks take days and charge more. Meanwhile, a thread with 67 comments just blew up on Reddit with a method that's been hiding in plain sight: use a US brokerage account to send money internationally at near-zero cost.
A user on r/ExpatFinance summed it up perfectly last week:
"Bank wires take days and the fees make no sense for smaller amounts, paying a flat $30 to $50 on a $200 transfer is just not a viable setup when you are doing it frequently. PayPal quietly eats a percentage on every single transaction, you only notice how much when you actually compare what you sent versus what arrived. Wise is genuinely better than both and I use it regularly, but still not free and the fees compound when you are sending often enough."
67 replies. Most of them agreed. But buried in the upvotes was something more interesting than yet another Wise recommendation.
Here's what one of the most-upvoted comments described:
"Open a brokerage account with international trading. Buy foreign currency when rates are favorable. Wire for free to your bank. Neither my broker (Fidelity) nor my foreign bank charge any wire fees. Money is sent same day and received by my bank most times next day."
The mechanics are simple. Fidelity (and some other US brokerages) let you hold and wire foreign currencies directly โ euros, pounds, CAD, AUD, MXN โ without charging an international wire fee. You convert USD to your target currency inside the brokerage at market rates, then wire the foreign currency to any foreign bank account you have registered.
Fidelity supports multi-currency trading. Schwab also works โ they offer 3 free international wires per quarter (after a $15 fee that's instantly refunded).
One-time setup. Fidelity calls it "standing wire instructions." You call them once, give your foreign bank's IBAN/SWIFT, and it's saved permanently. Future wires take under 10 minutes by phone or app.
EUR, GBP, CAD, AUD, MXN are all available. Buy โฌ500 when USD is strong, hold it in your account. The currency sits there denominated in euros โ not converted back to USD.
Call Fidelity or initiate online. Money leaves same day, arrives at your foreign bank next business day. No flat fee. No hidden markup at the wire stage โ you already locked in your exchange rate when you bought.
Before you cancel Wise, understand what you're actually paying:
| Method | FX Markup | Wire Fee | Speed | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fidelity brokerage | ~0.75% (under $100k) | $0 | 1 day | Large, planned transfers |
| IBKR (Interactive Brokers) | ~$2 per trade | $0 (UK entity) | 1 day | Very large amounts |
| Schwab | ~0.75% | Free (3/quarter) | 1โ2 days | Occasional transfers |
| Wise (bank transfer) | ~0.4โ0.6% | $0.5โ$3 fixed | 1โ2 days | Frequent small amounts |
| Bank wire | 2โ4% | $25โ$50 | 2โ5 days | Avoid for regular use |
Key insight from the thread: Fidelity's 0.75% FX markup seems worse than Wise's 0.4โ0.6% rate โ but Fidelity charges zero flat fees. For transfers over $1,000, the math often favors the brokerage method, especially if you buy currency in batches when the rate is favorable.
This method is not for everyone. It shines when:
Reddit was clear on this too. The brokerage method has real limitations:
"For some routes, Remitly, Taptap Send, XE, or WorldRemit can beat Wise on a given day. 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."
One commenter added a different angle for expats who just need cash:
"For my personal account I use Charles Schwab and just take money out of the ATM, as there are no foreign exchange or ATM fees. For larger transfers I use Wise to my foreign checking account once a month to pay rent and bills."
The Schwab checking account (separate from brokerage) reimburses all ATM fees globally and charges no foreign transaction fees. If you only need a few hundred dollars a month in local cash, this might be cheaper than any transfer method โ just withdraw locally and skip the wire entirely.
Tax note: Buying and then selling foreign currency in a brokerage is treated like stock trading โ potential capital gains. If you convert and spend or wire the money without selling back to USD, most tax advisors say there's no taxable event. But verify with your accountant, not Reddit.
Based on the thread, here's what experienced expats actually do:
๐ธ Compare transfer options for your corridor โ see real fees and exchange rates side by side
Open Calculator โThe brokerage wire method won't replace Wise for everyone. But for expats sending $1,000+ at a time to EUR/GBP/CAD accounts, it's quietly one of the cheapest options available โ and almost nobody talks about it outside of niche Reddit threads. Set it up once, and you'll stop paying flat wire fees forever.
Sources: r/ExpatFinance discussion, April 2026 ยท Fidelity international trading documentation ยท Interactive Brokers fee schedule