Bank wires cost $30β50 flat. PayPal quietly adds 2β3% FX markup. Even Wise fees compound when you send frequently. So what are expats actually using in 2026 for regular small international transfers? We dug into a 67-comment thread on r/ExpatFinance to find out β and the answers might surprise you.
A recent post on r/ExpatFinance hit a nerve: "Been sending smaller amounts internationally pretty regularly and the fees are starting to add up in a way that is hard to ignore." The thread got 67 replies in days. The OP had already tried bank wires ($30β50 flat fee on a $200 transfer), PayPal (hidden FX markup), and Wise (genuinely better, but still adds up at frequency).
This is the classic expat transfer problem: the standard tools are designed for occasional large transfers, not the reality of paying monthly rent abroad, supporting family, or running a business across borders.
π‘ Key insight: The visible fee is rarely the whole story. The real cost is usually the FX spread β the gap between the mid-market rate and what you actually get. Always compare the amount received, not just the headline fee.
Despite the OP's frustration, Wise remained the most recommended option in the thread. The key is using it correctly:
"Wise's fee structure actually rewards larger, less frequent transfers. If you can batch smaller amounts into fewer bigger transfers, the per-transfer fee hits you less often."
This was the most upvoted unconventional tip β and it genuinely works for US-based expats:
Fidelity users report zero wire fees. Schwab gives 3 free international wires per quarter (then $15, instantly refunded). IBKR reportedly offers ~$2 per $10k FX trade plus free wire to registered accounts.
"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."
β οΈ Tax note: If you buy foreign currency and later sell it back to USD for a gain, that's treated as a taxable event in the US. Check with your tax advisor. Spending or wiring the currency directly is generally fine.
Several users specifically called out Revolut as the winner for the OP's exact use case: frequent small transfers. The free tier includes a monthly fee-free FX allowance; paid tiers remove the cap. For corridors where both sender and receiver can use Revolut, internal transfers are instant and free.
Free global wire transfers with no monthly cap. Less discussed, but a legitimate option for US account holders who already bank with Chase.
Several users mentioned USDC on Base network (~0.5% total cost, ~10 minutes), USDC via Coinbase, and stablecoin rails in general. The catch: off-ramping to local fiat is where you give back the savings. Good for tech-savvy users where the recipient can spend crypto directly or has easy off-ramp access.
| Method | Typical Total Cost | Speed | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank Wire | $30β50 flat | 2β5 days | One-time large amounts |
| PayPal | 2β4% FX markup | Instant | Avoid for FX transfers |
| Wise (card-funded) | ~3β4% | 1β2 days | Occasional transfers |
| Wise (bank-funded) | ~0.5β1.5% | 1β3 days | Regular transfers, batched |
| Fidelity/IBKR wire | ~0.75β1% (FX only) | Same day / next day | US expats, larger amounts |
| Revolut (paid tier) | ~0.3β0.5% | Instantβ1 day | Frequent small amounts |
| USDC on Base | ~0.5% | ~10 min | Tech-savvy, crypto-friendly |
The most practical advice from the thread: no single service is cheapest for every corridor. USDβEUR, USDβMXN, GBPβPHP all have different competitive dynamics. Services like Remitly, Taptap Send, and WorldRemit sometimes beat Wise on specific routes.
Experienced expats keep 2β3 apps and compare the final amount received on each transfer β not the headline fee. Some routes have promotional rates that rotate, so an app that's expensive today may be cheapest next month.
π‘ Pro move: Use MoveAndMoney's Transfer Calculator to compare live rates across services for your specific corridor before you send.
One piece of advice came up multiple times: batch your transfers. If you need to cover monthly bills abroad, send monthly instead of weekly. If you use a brokerage FX account, buy currency in larger chunks when rates are favorable and hold it. This single habit can cut your effective transfer cost by 30β50% compared to sending small amounts frequently.
For most expats in 2026:
The hidden enemy isn't any one fee β it's frequency. Structure your transfers to minimize how often you pay, and always compare the amount received, not the amount sent.
π Compare live transfer rates for your corridor β see which service sends the most money right now.
Open Calculator βSources: r/ExpatFinance thread, April 2026 Β· r/ExpatFinance community Β· NomadGate