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Very good value foreign currency transfers with Azimo

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I was sent some information on Azimo, a super-low-cost money transfer service, last week, and it made me realise that I have never looked at currency transfer services before.  I thought it would be good to review Azimo and the other different options.

A lot of Head for Points readers may find themselves transferring money to another country if they have a house or family there, or if they need to pay for a holiday home rental.  You may even need to pay off a foreign credit card bill if you are using cards not issued in the country where you are living.

The knee jerk reaction in such cases is to use your existing bank – many will even let you make such transfers via your existing online banking service.  You are unlikely to be getting a good deal on the exchange rate, however.  A number of companies such as Caxton and Hi-Fx have sprung up in recent years to compete, offering the same service at a far lower cost.

Azimo positions itself slightly differently.  Whilst it is more than happy to send payments to Europe, the USA etc, they are also able to make Western Union-style transfers to developing countries.  It therefore offers a good deal for migrants who want to send money home.

It can handle payments to 190 countries, so literally pretty much everywhere.  In some countries, such as Ghana, the recipient can pick up the money in cash from selected locations if they do not have a bank account.

What is impressive about Azimo is that they will give you a quote without you having to even register.  Via their home page you can run through various scenarios.

The transaction fee varies from nothing to £10.  European transactions are just £1.  Transfers can be made via their website or by using their mobile app.

The exchange rate used is VERY close to the spot rate.  On Sunday, when I wrote this, they were quoting €1.183 to France vs a spot rate of €1.196.  For something more exotic, like Thailand, the rate was 52.9  vs a spot rate of 53.7.  You won’t get anything nearly as good from your bank.

For comparison, I also looked at HiFX as I have an existing account with them.  For Euros, they were offering an exchange rate of €1.15 and a £9 fee, noticeably worse than Azimo.  For Thai Baht, HiFX quoted 51.6 THB to the £1 plus a £9 fee – again, worse than Azimo by over 2%.

Azimo is UK-based and fully licensed, and is backed by a group of well-respected private equity and venture capital investors, most of whom I am familiar with from my previous career.

If you currently use Caxton or HiFX, Azimo is worth a look next time you make a transfer.  If you are currently using your normal bank to make large currency transfers, then you should bang your head against your desk and then take a look at all three of these companies.

Comments (32)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • Frenske says:

    Perhaps first stop for foreign transfers should be: https://transferwise.com/. It is made by the origonal designers of skype.

    Although I signed up I never had to use it at the end. It is limited to a smallish number of countries. As far I understand money is not really transferred, but it is levered against money tranferred in the other direction e.g. from France.

    There is no fee so is excellent for small sums.

    • David says:

      It’s incorrect to say there’s no fee with Transferwise. They give you an exchange rate that’s only a few pips away from what FX traders are paying, and they then assess a charge of approx 0.5% for their service. Still excellent value, but not free.

  • Kenneth Tan says:

    Thomas Exchange Global appears to offer better than compared with Azimo. They do physical cash at their branches (3 in the city, 1 in Victoria and 1 on the Strand) as well as bank transfers. Much better exchange rates if you print an order on line compared with just rolling up to the branch.

  • Gabbai says:

    Transferwise is a better service. As an example taken a minute ago, a [gross] transfer of £1000 to US$ will give $1655.96 as against $1630.49 with Azimo. I have checked out Transferwise against others numerous times and it always comes out on top, sometimes by a very large margin.

  • Noqueuing says:

    Thanks everyone about the advice regarding Transferwise.
    I’ve always used Best Foreign Exchange (better than HiFX), but just checked and Transferwise did beat them by a few pounds for a £1000 transfer!!
    Thank you Head for Points for once again educating your truly!

  • tony says:

    Amex FX rates are horrific. I used them to accept a couple of US$ payments to my business but I was losing somewhere north of 5% per trade.

    I’ve opened a US$ account now as I was losing out again when I then spent US$, although that’s less of a concern with the new zero FX loading credit cards…

  • Ben says:

    I’d also say transferwise is a great option – very slick w

  • Alan says:

    Is this only for transfers to individuals or does it work to companies too? I’m thinking this could be a cheaper way to pay off an Amex ICC Dollar statement… 🙂

    • Rob says:

      I imagine they can send to any bank account. I was using HiFX to pay my IDC bill – the reason I stopped is that Standard Chartered, their US middle man, took an undisclosed $20 fee!

      • Alan says:

        Ahh – did you find any way round that? That’s a pretty hefty fee!

        • Rob says:

          No, I went back to using HSBC because I only ever put very tiny charges through that card. HSBC also does not charge me a flat processing fee as I used to work for them and it is an ex-staff perk!

          • Alan says:

            Ah OK, not something widely available then! I’ll keep using it as I do then currently then – pretty much not at all! (mainly got it for the xfer to SQ and the travel insurance without having to spend on an Amex/for over-70s!)

  • Volker says:

    Azimo and transferwise don’t even seem to offer credit card payments.

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.