Making the cross-border payment decision: Wire or international ACH?

November 04, 2022

ACH and wire transfers are two of the most popular and widely used methods of making international payments. Take a look and see what's best for your business.

Before you initiate a cross-border payment, particularly one that you’ve previously made with an international wire transfer, always ask two questions: 

  1.  Is your payment large and important, so that you would you benefit from end-to-end tracking and speedy delivery to maximize cash flow?  
  2.  Or is the payment smaller, in which case your primary goal in choosing a payment channel is to see your payment delivered cost efficiently and in full? 

 If it’s a smaller payment, a wire probably won’t make sense. You should consider opting for another convenient but less expensive electronic payment method: an international ACH.

Why an international wire?

An international wire transfer should generally be the payment method of choice with a higher-value transaction. When managing larger payments, many businesses want to maximize their cash flow by holding onto the funds as long as possible. To do this, many businesses prefer a faster payment method like international wires and often schedule the payment for just before their invoice due dates. In addition, given the strategic importance of these payments, many businesses want to ensure they have end-to-end tracking of the payment so they can be confident the payment will be delivered effectively, and any problems can be quickly resolved. 

 Wires may also be best if you must deliver U.S. dollars, rather than the local currency, to your overseas beneficiary. An international ACH can only deliver the payment in local currency. 

Additionally, you can send a wire to more countries than you can send an ACH. Thus, if you can’t send an international ACH to the country where your beneficiary resides, a wire may be your only electronic payment option.

International ACH advantages

However, if the payment is non-urgent, such as a vendor or payroll payment that you can plan for, and your transaction is low value, an international ACH is often the better choice. It offers these important advantages: 

  • Lower transaction fees. While the basic bank fee for a wire usually ranges from $15 to $50, an international ACH typically costs less than $5. 
  • No lifting fees. International wire transfers commonly incur lifting fees. Each bank in the chain of banks supporting an international wire typically deducts a small processing fee. Thus, if you are sending 500 euros overseas, by the time the wire reaches the beneficiary, there may only be 450 euros left. International ACH payments do not incur lifting fees. If you send 500 euros, the beneficiary gets 500 euros and there is no mystery about the size of the payment that will be delivered. While full value of the payment can also be delivered using an international wire, the sender will incur an additional fee.

Some ideal uses for international ACH

A shareholder services company provides an example of a business that has found international ACH payments to be the best fit for some of its payment needs. 

 The company is contractually obligated to make quarterly dividend payments to shareholders, and some live overseas. For beneficiaries with just a few shares of stock, that can mean making dividend payments of less than a dollar in some cases. Spending $15 to $50 to initiate such a small international payment by wire to shareholders doesn’t make sense. Nor is mailing a U.S. dollar check drawn on an overseas U.S. bank a good solution, since such checks can take months to clear and are expensive to deposit. 

The company opted to start making its overseas dividend payments by international ACH. It still costs a few dollars to make what, in some cases, can be an extremely low-value payment. But the fee is much lower than it would be for a wire, and the non-urgent transactions can be scheduled two to four days in advance — the typical settlement time for an international ACH. Plus, the company avoids all the challenges of paying by check, including escheatment. 

Other non-urgent and low-value payments to consider making via international ACH include: 

  • Payroll and direct deposit payments  
  • Payments to gig workers and consultants  
  • Travel and expense related transactions  
  • Legal settlements  
  • Recurring vendor payments

Transitioning to ACH takes preparation

If you decide to transition to international ACH for some of your global payments, allow for some setup time. 

 “Depending on the country, the beneficiary details you need to gather to send along with an international ACH can be different from those needed for a wire,” explains Alyssa Demers, group product manager at U.S. Bank. “You may need to collect beneficiary information such as mobile phone numbers, email addresses or other country-specific numbers, and you should allow some time to gather and store the new information.” 

An expanding global network

U.S. Bank can now enable clients to send secure international ACH payments to more than 20 countries and plans to keep expanding its global network. “We recently increased the number of currencies we support with international ACH to nine, and we will continue adding currencies,” Demers says. 

 The bank makes it easy to send international ACH payments. You can tell the SinglePoint® online banking system you want to pay a certain amount of U.S. dollars to an overseas recipient, and it automatically delivers the appropriate amount of local currency. Or you can you tell the system to pay the beneficiary an amount of local currency — say 500 euros — and the system delivers the payment and debits your U.S. Bank account for the corresponding number of dollars. The system handles all the FX conversions. 

Visit the U.S. Bank website’s global payments page or contact us to learn more about creating an effective international payment strategy.

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Disclosures

Eligibility requirements, restrictions and fees may apply. Foreign-denominated funds are subject to foreign currency exchange risk. Customers are not protected against foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations by FDIC insurance, or any other insurance or guaranty program. Deposit accounts with non-U.S. financial institutions offered through U.S. Bank are not deposits of U.S. Bank and are not insured by the FDIC. U.S. Bank and SinglePoint are registered trademarks of U.S. Bank National Association.

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Loan approval is subject to credit approval and program guidelines. Not all loan programs are available in all states for all loan amounts. Interest rate and program terms are subject to change without notice. Mortgage, home equity and credit products are offered by U.S. Bank National Association. Deposit products are offered by U.S. Bank National Association. Member FDIC.