International Money Transfers from the UAE: The Complete Guide
Say you send AED 2,000 to family every month. One provider advertises "zero fees." Another charges a flat AED 15. On paper, the free one looks better — until you check the exchange rate each one is actually using. A weaker rate on the "free" transfer can quietly cost you more than the AED 15 fee ever would, and over twelve monthly transfers that gap adds up to real money, not pocket change.
This is the trap that catches most people comparing transfer options in the UAE: they look at the fee and stop there.
What actually determines what your family receives is a combination of four things:
- The exchange rate offered — this is where most of the real cost hides, not in the fee line
- The fee itself — sometimes zero, sometimes fixed, sometimes a percentage
- How the money arrives — bank transfer, straight to a mobile wallet like UPI or GCash, or cash pickup at a branch
- How long it takes — same-day through an exchange house, versus one to three business days through a traditional bank wire
None of this is fixed. Rates move daily, sometimes within the same day, so a provider that wins on Monday isn't guaranteed to win on Thursday. That's the real reason to check before every transfer rather than picking one provider once and sticking with it out of habit.
The three ways to send money from the UAE
Every option on the market is really a variation on three routes, and each one trades speed, cost, and convenience differently.
Exchange houses — Al Ansari, LuLu, and similar — are the default for a reason. Branches are everywhere, most run same-day delivery, and on the busiest corridors (India, Pakistan, the Philippines) you'll often find fee-free transfers as standard. What you're giving up is rate transparency: the number on the board can shift a few times a day, and you won't know exactly what you're getting until you're at the counter or inside the app confirming the transaction.
Digital apps — Wise, Remitly, TapTap Send — flip that trade-off. You see the fee and the rate before you commit, no surprises at the counter, and everything happens from your phone. They're not always the cheapest option on every corridor, but the upfront transparency makes comparing them against an exchange house genuinely easy, which is worth something on its own.
Your UAE bank can send the transfer too, and for some people it's the natural choice — everything's already in one place, no new account to open. But banks are usually the slowest route (a wire can take one to three business days once it leaves the UAE), and rarely the most competitive on rate, since convenience is what you're paying for, not price.
None of these is universally "the best." The right one depends on how much you're sending, how fast you need it there, and whether the receiving side has a wallet or app that changes the calculation entirely — more on that below.
Where the real cost actually hides
Here's the mechanic worth understanding once, because it explains almost every "cheap vs. expensive" surprise you'll run into.
Say a provider quotes you an exchange rate for AED to another currency. If that rate sits meaningfully below the real market rate, the difference is effectively a hidden fee — even if the provider charges nothing on top. A competitor charging a small fixed fee but offering a rate close to the real market rate can easily deliver more money to the other end, despite looking more expensive on the surface.
The only way to know which is actually cheaper for your transfer is to compare what lands on the other side, not what's advertised on this one. That's the whole point of checking a live comparison before you send, rather than defaulting to whichever provider you used last time.
How long it actually takes
Exchange houses and apps typically move money same-day on major corridors — some considerably faster, depending on how the receiving country's banking rails work (India's IMPS system, for instance, can credit a bank account within minutes once the money lands). Bank wires are the outlier: budget one to three business days, more if it crosses a weekend.
And weekends matter more here than people expect. The UAE, Saudi Arabia, and most of the Gulf run a Friday–Saturday weekend, while the countries receiving the money — India, Pakistan, the Philippines — run Saturday–Sunday. Send a bank wire on a Thursday afternoon after your bank's processing cutoff, and it may not actually start moving until the following Monday on both ends. If timing matters, that single detail is worth checking before you send, not after.
What you'll need before you send
For a bank transfer, you'll generally need the recipient's account number or IBAN, their bank's SWIFT/BIC code, and their full name exactly as it appears on their bank account — mismatches here are the single most common reason transfers get delayed or bounced back. Exchange houses and apps typically ask for less: often just the recipient's registered mobile number for wallet-based transfers, or the same account details for bank-linked ones.
Larger or first-time transfers may trigger standard compliance checks — proof of source of funds, purpose of transfer — under UAE and destination-country regulations. This isn't a red flag on your account; it's routine for the industry and usually resolves within the same day if your documentation is straightforward.
Sending to a specific country
The right provider, timing, and cost expectations shift depending on where the money's going. Full breakdowns, corridor by corridor:
- Sending money to India
- Sending money to Pakistan
- Sending money to the Philippines
- Sending money to Saudi Arabia
Common mistakes worth avoiding
Comparing fees instead of amount received. Covered above, but it's worth repeating because it's the single most expensive habit people fall into.
Sending right before a weekend without checking cutoff times. A transfer that would clear same-day on a Tuesday can sit for three extra days if it's sent Thursday evening.
Getting the recipient's name slightly wrong. Banks match names against account records more strictly than people expect. A missing middle name or a transliteration mismatch is enough to bounce a transfer back, costing you the time and sometimes a return fee.
Assuming your last provider is still your cheapest option. Rates shift daily. The exchange house or app that won last month isn't guaranteed to win this month.
Frequently asked questions
Is it cheaper to send money through an exchange house or a bank? Usually an exchange house, but not always — it depends on the corridor and the day. Banks tend to lose on rate even when they don't charge a separate fee, while exchange houses are more likely to be fee-free and competitive on rate for major corridors. Check a live comparison rather than assuming.
How much can I send from the UAE without extra checks? Smaller, routine transfers rarely trigger anything beyond standard verification. Larger transfers, or a pattern of frequent large transfers, may prompt your provider to ask for source-of-funds documentation — standard practice, not a sign of a problem.
Can I send money from the UAE straight to a mobile wallet like UPI or GCash? A growing number of providers support this on major corridors, bypassing the need for full bank account details. Availability varies by provider and corridor, so confirm with the specific app or exchange house before assuming it's supported.
Do exchange rates change during the day? Yes, often more than once. That's exactly why the "cheapest" provider yesterday isn't guaranteed to be cheapest today.
See exactly what today's rates mean for your transfer in our live AED exchange rate comparison.
Fact-check items before publishing (per the content engine's fact-safety rules):
- All corridor and compare links below were verified against the live sitemap.xml (2026-07-13) and corrected — India and Philippines guides use "from-[country]-to-uae" slugs, not "uae-to-[country]", even though the pages cover both directions.
- The bank-guide links (ADCB, Emirates NBD DirectRemit, FAB) have been removed — those pages don't exist in the sitemap yet. Re-add once the bank guide series is built and confirmed live.
- Worth flagging separately: the sitemap shows both /en/providers/wise and /en/providers/wise-uae, and both /en/providers/remitly and /en/providers/remitly-uae. Confirm these aren't duplicate/competing pages before this guide (or future ones) links to one over the other.
- Confirm which exchange houses currently run genuinely fee-free transfers on which corridors — fee structures change.
- Confirm current UPI/GCash direct-send support claims against what your provider pages actually state.
- Confirm the compliance/documentation paragraph against current UAE and destination-country requirements before publishing as-is.
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