Glossary
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Foreign Transaction Fee

Foreign Transaction Fee

An additional charge applied to international payments, typically a percentage added by banks for cross-border transactions.

What is a foreign transaction fee?

Foreign transaction fees are extra charges applied when money crosses borders or involves currency conversion. If you receive payment from an international client or pay a foreign supplier, your bank or payment processor may add a fee—typically 1-3% of the transaction amount.

These fees can add up for businesses that regularly work with international clients, making it important to factor them into your pricing or choose providers with lower fees.

When foreign transaction fees apply

You might encounter these fees when:

  • Receiving international payments — A client in another country pays your invoice
  • Paying foreign suppliers — Purchasing materials or services from abroad
  • Currency conversion — Converting payments from one currency to another
  • International wire transfers — Sending or receiving wire payments across borders

Minimizing foreign transaction fees

To reduce these costs: use payment processors with lower international fees, consider invoicing in your local currency, batch international payments when possible, and compare fee structures between banks and payment services before choosing one.

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