Tax & Compliance
Cross-Border Wire Fees for Freelancers: SWIFT, Wise, and PayPal Compared
Direct Answer: Cross-border wire fees are bank and intermediary charges deducted when international clients pay freelancers via SWIFT. Wise and PayPal often cost less than traditional wires — build a 3–5% buffer into international rates or specify that clients pay transfer fees.
How cross-border payment fees affect freelancer net income — SWIFT wire costs, Wise vs PayPal pricing, and how to invoice international clients to protect your margins.
Why wire fees matter to your freelance rate
A $5,000 invoice can become $4,920 after SWIFT intermediary fees — or less if your bank charges receiving fees. Over a year, payment friction can cost thousands.
Pricing international work without accounting for transfer costs is one of the most common freelancer financial mistakes.
SWIFT wire transfers
SWIFT is the traditional bank-to-bank network. Clients send from their bank; you receive in yours. Fees are opaque and often split between sender and receiver.
- Sender fees: typically $15–$50 per wire (varies by bank and country)
- Intermediary fees: $10–$30 deducted in transit for some corridors
- Receiving fees: $0–$25 depending on your bank
- Exchange rate markup: banks often add 2–4% above mid-market rate
- Best for: large payments ($10k+) where client insists on bank transfer
Wise (formerly TransferWise)
Wise is often the lowest-cost option for freelancers who can convince clients to pay via Wise instead of SWIFT.
- Transparent fee shown upfront (often 0.4–1.5% of transfer amount)
- Mid-market exchange rate with no hidden markup
- Multi-currency account — hold USD, EUR, GBP, INR separately
- Popular with freelancers billing US and EU clients
- Indian freelancers: can receive foreign currency and convert to INR
PayPal and similar platforms
- Convenient for small clients and marketplace-style payments
- Fees: typically 2.9% + fixed fee for goods and services
- Currency conversion adds 3–4% above mid-market
- Withdrawal to bank may incur additional fees
- Best for: smaller invoices under $2,000 or clients who refuse bank transfer
How to price for cross-border fees
- Build a 3–5% buffer into international rates
- Specify in your contract: client pays all transfer fees (OUR, not SHA)
- Offer Wise payment details to reduce client and your costs
- Invoice in the client's preferred currency to avoid double conversion
- For Indian freelancers: keep FIRC from your bank as proof of inward remittance
What to put on international invoices
- Currency code and symbol on every line item and total
- Bank SWIFT/BIC, IBAN or account number, and beneficiary name
- Wise payment link or email if applicable
- Note: "Client responsible for transfer fees unless otherwise agreed"
- Payment reference: invoice number for easy reconciliation
Put this into practice
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