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-   -   Cheapest way to send funds to Europe (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/cheapest-way-to-send-funds-to-europe-744480/)

Clifton Oct 23rd, 2007 04:08 PM

Cheapest way to send funds to Europe
 

Does anyone know the cheapest way to send a fairly small amount of Euro to Europe? Not a complicated issue, we're just trying to get a couple hundred Euro to a family member who lives in Ireland, without expensive wire transfers or making her run to a Western Union location (she's done a lot for us already recently)

We thought a money order in Euro and just mail it. But we're surprised to find that our bank, a large chain, doesn't do int'l money orders and the Post Office does Bolivia, Japan, etc. But not Europe! (huh??)

Anyway, ideas welcome.

janisj Oct 23rd, 2007 04:22 PM

&quot;<i>Not a complicated issue,</i>&quot; Shouldn't be, but it is.

There really isn't a good/cheap way to get funds from the States to Europe. Few banks do it, and the ones that do charge high fees, plus the recipient will probably also have to pay fees to have the money deposited in her acct. Even risking mailing &euro; TC's will likely result in her having to pay her bank to accept them.

P_M Oct 23rd, 2007 04:26 PM

I was going to suggest the &euro; TC. As janis stated, she probably will have to pay fees to cash it but it still might be the cheapest way.

Does she live in a city with an AmEx office? I wonder if they will charge her to cash it. I would ask that question of AmEx.

....Oh heck, just take it to her peronally. I would take any excuse to visit Ireland again. :-D

worldinabag Oct 23rd, 2007 04:26 PM

Hi

Don't know alot about it but is it possible to get her bank account number and deposit the money from your bank. Fees and charges will no doubt apply but how much is the big issue!

StCirq Oct 23rd, 2007 04:34 PM

No matter how you send it, the recipient is going to end up paying about $25 to receive it (unless you choose to absorb that fee yourself, which you can only do in certain types of transactions).

The cheapest way is through an international draft. That will cost you $5-$10 on your end, and you'll have to mail it and she'll get it about a week later (and pay as I mentioned above, unless you opt to absorb those costs.

Another option is to purchase traveler's checks in euros and mail them. Again, she'll pay on her end ( you won't have the option to pay for her to receive them).And you'll pay a bad exchange rate for the TCs.

A wire transfer will cost anywhere from $15-$60, and again she'll pay to receive the money unless you volunteer to pay that.

There are no good choices that I'm aware of. It might actually be easier to mail her a check in US dollars and have her get her bank to cash it (for a fee of course) and deposit the euros in her account. Send more than the equivalent of 200 euros though.


TuckH Oct 23rd, 2007 04:35 PM

Not that I'm suggesting that you do this but FWIW, we regularly slip a C Note (or two) into an ordinary letter we send to family in Germany.
They easily convert the $ to &euro;s.

As Janis has said, it's difficult and it's the chance we take. Nothing's been missed (yet).

Clifton Oct 23rd, 2007 04:46 PM

Thanks everyone. I think you've pretty much confirmed what we were finding. She lives in a small village a ways outside of Dublin, so not a lot of services out there, except the BoI. Just thought it was odd that I could run down to the locale USPS and get a money order for Bolivianos, but not Euro. There must be a story there somewhere...

Tuck, that's what I was telling my wife! It's not a huge risk, really, given the amount. I'd probably just go that way.

My wife just called her Mum though in Australia and it turns out M.O.'s in Euros are available there so I think she's now leaning towards having her take some out of our Aus acct and send it from there. I guess that's not too bad a plan. I didn't think of it..

P_M - now there's a good idea! I'd love to. Oddly, what we're paying her back for is the fees for my Irish citizenship, which had to be drawn on an Irish bank. So she took care of it for us. I got my final papers the other day. I'm Irish! (more or less). Now I'm afraid if I go, I won't be comin' back.

Viajero2 Oct 23rd, 2007 04:49 PM

PayPal account.

StCirq Oct 23rd, 2007 05:13 PM

Congratulations, Clifton!

I'm &quot;Irish&quot; too :)

sanschag Oct 23rd, 2007 05:18 PM

You might want to look into XETrade (http://www.xe.com/fx). I have not actually used it myself, but I have looked into for transferring money from my German account back to the US. I have seen some other posters recommending it as well.

Paul

Kellye Oct 23rd, 2007 05:18 PM

I also suggest paypal. She could use it anywhere online and most people shop online today...even if just occasionally.

teacherCanada Oct 23rd, 2007 05:25 PM

Clifton, congratulations on becoming Irish. The best I could do was to marry a lovely Irish girl.

travelhorizons Oct 23rd, 2007 05:52 PM

Can you deposit the funds in her American bank account? Then she can withdraw them with her ATM card.

traveler2005 Oct 23rd, 2007 06:31 PM

I was going to suggest the same thing - couldn't you deposit money in an American account and let her withdraw it with an ATM card.

If she doesn't have one, perhaps you could open an account and then mail her the ATM card.

I opened an account at a local credit union for the sole purpose of being able to use an ATM in Europe for lower fees than our normal bank does.

I have a separate account that I opened so that a friend could access money. I opened the account, but then gave her the ATM card.

Most credit union accounts have low minimum balances.

Debbie

Clifton Oct 23rd, 2007 07:30 PM

Hey StCirq - I do remember now. You and I had a tangent on someone else's thread once, I think, about dual citizenship. Back when we were just requesting the paperwork. We hope to follow in your footsteps one of these days. Maybe not the Dordogne, but at least the same continent.

teacherCanada. I guess I sort of did too. Well, she's an Aussie, but with Irish citizenship since birth. Guess it's a bit late to mention it, but up until the end of last year, you could submit for citizenship through being married to a citizen. Changed after I applied at the end of 2006, and now you have to take up residence.

On the original topic, more thanks to everyone. I don't see settign up an American bank account just for this. If she were a daughter away at school or something, maybe. I'll check to see if she has a Paypal account but I'll probably just try to slip it in her mailbox (long distance). For her, it's one of those &quot;ah, don't worry about it&quot; things, so she probably wouldn't ever cash out at an ATM, but we just want to pay her back all the same. Great people. Very first time I met them, they practically insisted we move in for the week. So it's just a family thing, not so much like a &quot;transaction&quot; or anything. Just thought it was going to be a lot simpler, lol. Something along the lines of that we were just picking the wrong bank for a money order. Ah well, we'll probably just send it from Oz and then she can't quibble when she finds it in the post.

flanneruk Oct 23rd, 2007 10:57 PM

1. Most Irish post offices are Western Union outlets. If there's a BofI in your relative's village, there's bound to be a post office, and it'll almost certainly have the computer terminal to handle Western Union. No need to run miles.

2. Don't know about BofI, but most UK banks charge surprisingly little for handling foreign cheques in major currencies (a definintion which does indeed include AU$): usually about &pound;10, which is probably cheaper than any other option except:

3. The easiest solution is to do what cousins of the Irish have been doing for the past 150 years - stuff a few bills in your own currency in a letter. No-one's going to bother opening it, and if your relative's got a BofI branch handy, it'll turn them into real money. Or, if you've a bureau de change nearby, stuff the relevant amount in &euro; notes in a letter.

The days when a letter from abroad meant cash, which meant temptation for Irish postmen, are long gone - though even then, the postmen never stole the cash. These days, they're usually begging letters from distant cousins in the New World who can't understand why their ancestors chose to move to a somewhere so much poorer than Ireland and want help getting an Irish passport.

jkbritt Oct 24th, 2007 08:44 AM

I would also do Paypal. They charge the receiver about 3-5% for the service, but it is fast and safe.

CasaDelCipresso Oct 24th, 2007 09:14 AM

PayPal is what I'd do too.

that said...I've sent US post office money orders to Ireland before!! can't recalll though if they were in Euros or if I just sent them in USD (it was a few years ago)and the pereson recievinig them just converted them to euros at the bank or credit union or wherever.

janisj Oct 24th, 2007 11:52 AM

Wouldn't the recipient need to have a PayPal account for that to work? I would think most people don't have one.

GSteed Oct 24th, 2007 11:56 AM

Inquire at your local PO about registered letters. I have been using that service for ten years and never had anything go astray. I am suggesting you mail Euros via Registered mail. A more secure service will be 'insured'.


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