Send money from the US to Thailand (USD → THB)
The real cost of sending dollars to Thailand isn't the fee — it's the exchange-rate spread banks bury in the rate. Here's what a transfer actually costs, and the cheapest way to move a relocation lump sum.
The short answer
- Compare the amount received, not the fee. Banks hide a 1–3% markup in the USD→THB rate.
- Most transfers: a mid-market specialist like Wise usually wins.
- Large relocation lump sum: also quote a specialist like OFX; their margins tighten on big amounts.
Informational only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Cross-border tax is fact-specific; confirm with a qualified cross-border CPA or adviser before acting. Some links are affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Full disclaimer.
What sending USD to Thailand really costs
Enter an amount to compare the mid-market value with a typical bank's buried spread. Illustrative — confirm live rates with the provider.
Move it for less
USD→THB is a high-volume, well-served corridor with competitive rates — but for tax residents, large inbound remittances raise the 2024 remittance-tax question.
Some links are affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Always compare the amount received before sending.
Why a bank wire usually loses
A traditional SWIFT wire to Thailand hits you in three places: your bank's wire fee, intermediary-bank "lifting" fees skimmed in transit, and the marked-up exchange rate. Mid-market services like Wise avoid the correspondent-bank chain by paying out from local accounts, which is why more of your money arrives. See the full breakdown of moving money abroad.
FAQ
What's the cheapest way to send money to Thailand?
For most transfers, a mid-market specialist like Wise beats a bank wire because banks bury a markup (typically 1–3%) in the exchange rate on top of any fee. For a very large relocation lump sum, also get a quote from a specialist like OFX. Always compare the amount that actually arrives, not the advertised fee.
Should I send US dollars and convert in Thailand, or convert to THB first?
Converting with a mid-market specialist before or during the transfer almost always beats letting the destination bank convert your dollars, because the receiving bank sets its own (worse) rate. The exception is countries where US dollars are widely used day to day.
Are large transfers to Thailand taxed or reported?
Moving your own money isn't itself taxable, but two things matter: as a US person you must report foreign accounts on the FBAR once they top $10,000 combined, and some countries tax foreign income that's remitted in (Thailand and Japan, for example). Check the Thailand guide for local specifics.
Keep reading
- Money guide: Americans in Thailand — banking, taxes, and residency.
- Transfer cost comparison tool — any amount, any currency pair.
- The cheapest way to move money abroad.
Published 2026-06-04. Exchange rates and provider fees change constantly — confirm live numbers with the provider and compare the amount received before you send.
Informational only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Cross-border tax is fact-specific; confirm with a qualified cross-border CPA or adviser before acting. Some links are affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Full disclaimer.