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Why are wire transfers in Canada so expensive compared to Europe? The simple answer I've seen is because bankers are crooks, but I find that this oversimplifies the situation — I don't believe bankers in Europe are particularly nicer than their colleagues in Canada. To transfer money between my Swedish and Dutch bank accounts, I pay nothing. I pay a small monthly fee for my Swedish credit card, and of course I pay nothing to simply obtain information through internet banking. By comparison, an the Royal Bank of Canada, outgoing wire transfers within Canada start at 20 CA$, and fees for Alterna, include 30 CA$ for a wire transfer, 5 CA$ for an ATM inquiry, and Search for items, deposits, names, accounts... is 5 CA$/item (although I'm not quite sure what that means). It's not cheaper in other credit unions, such as the Finnish Credit Union or The Energy Credit Union.

Why does it cost so much, and where does the money go?

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gerrit
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I don't believe there is any particular structural or financial reason that outgoing wire transfers cost so much in Canada, their costs are no higher than other countries (and lower than many). Wires seem to be an area where the Canadian banks have decided people don't comparison shop, so it's not a competitive advantage to offer a better price.

The rates you quoted are on the low side: $80 for a largish international wire is not unusual, and HSBC charges up to $150!

There are several alternative ways to transfer money domestically in Canada.

If the recipient banks at the same bank, it's possible to go into a branch and transfer money directly from your own account to their account (I've never been charged for this). The transfer is immediate. But it couldn't be done online, last time I checked.

For transfers where you don't know the recipients bank account, you can pay online with Interac E-Transfers, offered by most Canadian banks. It's basically e-mailing money. It usually costs $1 to $1.50 per transfer, and has limits on how much you can send per day/week.

Each of the banks also have a bill-pay service, but unlike similar services in the US (where they mail a paper check if the recipient isn't on their system), each Canadian bank has a limited number of possible payees (mostly utilities, governments, major stores).

Rob Hoare
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"because bankers are crooks" is a very close answer. Just accept the truth that financial industry is the only service industry that could turn into giant parasite chopping pieces from real economy. I am not anti-financial, because greed is not banker's fault, but just one significant part of human nature. Every human being has greed and fear built in it.

But financial industry is the only one which is built on exploiting greed and fear.

Governments are throwing gasoline canister into that fire in desperate extinguish attempts, trying to "regulate" but only making it worse. With all that "counter-cybercrime", "counter-terrorism" and "counter-everything" efforts, ordinary people will be hurt as always.

sanaris
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Transaction fees are part of the income for banks, and as we know they are profit making corporations just like any other Company. The differene is that instead of buying and packing and Selling groceries, they buy and package and sell Money. Within the rules and the market they will try to maximize their profit, exactly like Apple or GM or Walmart and so on.

Sweden and Holland are part of the European union and the leaders of the union has defined (by law) that certain types of transactions should be [start edit] with the same fees as national transactions [end edit]. In order to transfer Money from your Swedish account to the Dutch account you do what is called a SEPA transaction, which should be done in one day [start edit] with the same cost as a national payment (currently zero in Sweden) [end edit] to you as a customer.

[Addition] Possibly your Swedish account is in swedisk krona SEK and will incurr a cost for Exchange into Euro.

Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_Euro_Payments_Area

Gunnar

ghellquist
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