Bobmo123 wrote: » Hello, I am due to get 150k in inheritance in the next month and was wonder if anybody knew who charges the bank exchange rate? It is going from Llyod's Bank in the UK to AIB here. Does the UK bank change it in to Euro before it even gets sent or is it send in GBP and AIB do the change? Thanks for your help.
Jim2007 wrote: » In doing the transfer, the UK bank will do as instructed by the person making the payment, so they will convert it Euro, if instructed, otherwise the transfer will be in Sterling.
Bobmo123 wrote: » Hi Jim. The solicitor is sending the money in GBP to my uncle into his UK account as he is the executor of the will. I am not in a position to change that part of it.
quokula wrote: » I transferred a similar amount of money in the past through Transferwise. I already had a UK bank account with Santander bank from when I lived in the UK previously - I'd advise seeing if you can get a real sterling bank account and receive the money that way, maybe you can do this with a Northern Irish bank? Bank accounts are backed by government so your money is guaranteed if anything goes wrong. Other financial services don't necessarily have such protection and if the company were to go bust while they have your money you may not see it again. So what I did was take the full amount into Santander, and then transferred 5k daily through Transferwise over the space of a couple of weeks - transfers from Santander to Transferwise were usually pretty much instant, currency conversion within Transferwise was instant, and then Transferwise to Permanent TSB tended to take a day or so. Doing it that way meant that only a relatively small amount was exposed if anything went wrong with Transferwise. Nothing did though, it was all fairly smooth and easy.
Bobmo123 wrote: » Thanks Quokula, I was thinking of doing the smaller amounts but I was worried it would cost a lot to do that as you would get charged per transaction. I will probably will do 1 smaller amount to test it.
kenmm wrote: » Therefore again, to be clear, the process is: 1 - Solicitor transfers from UK bank in Solicitors name to currency converters UK Bank account.
Bobmo123 wrote: » The solicitor is sending the money in GBP to my uncle into his UK account as he is the executor of the will.
Bobmo123 wrote: » Hi Jim. The solicitor is sending the money in GBP to my uncle into his UK account as he is the executor of the will. I am not in a position to change that part of it. The estate has been submitted and approved and all due taxes paid. The transfer of the funds from the sale of the house is the last step. Thanks for that information.
barrac wrote: » OP I'd recommend you talk to your own bank as well. Depending on who you bank with, some will be happy to give a quote on an amount of that size and will generally match a broker rate once they know they are in competition. You also have the option of opening a £ account in Ireland with your bank and exchange at a later date. By all means check out the providers mentioned above but don't write off your own bank.
kenmm wrote: » It's going to be nearly impossible to get a UK account without a UK address and is entirely unnecessary and adding a level of worry into the OPs situation that is uncalled for. Moneycorp (for example) are very clearly regulated (https://www.moneycorp.com/en-gb/help-support/personal-faq/#safe) and use segregated accounts. I am sure Currencyfair is the same. Also - going 5k at a time (over 30 days?) - not only is this an unnecessary complication, but it will be sure to trigger all sorts of fraud alerts and introduce further delay. Also - UK banks aren't covered beyond 85K anyway (and probably only for UK residents) and Its not like UK banks are particularly safe from going under?...
Heidi Hundreds Trail wrote: » It’s very easy to get a UK account, just open a Revolut account. Can then decide how is best to transfer over the money - either using Revolut premium, doing it in stages, directly by trasnferwise or currency fair etc.
kenmm wrote: » yep - didn't think about Revolut - not really a UK bank account in the same sense as the poster stated, I was talking about traditional banks (as was the poster who first mentioned this). A Revolut account will give you a UK Iban/account number. You can also do the transfer inside the Revolut app. Why do you say premium tho? Can you elaborate a bit - is it a better rate (I remember they had better cash withdrawal limits, but don't remember the conversion charge).@OP - Revolut rate will also be far, far better than traditional bank to bank transfers (But maybe not quite as good as currency converter service).