Banks vs Brokers
Banks vs Currency Brokers for Property Transfers
Currency brokers save buyers thousands on large property transfers. Compare real costs, fees, and timelines for transfers over €100,000 to Spain.
How Banks and Brokers Compare
Currency Brokers
High-Street Banks
The interbank rate — sometimes called the mid-market rate — is the rate banks trade with each other. It is the most accurate measure of a currency's value at any moment. When you transfer money through a bank, you never receive this rate. Instead, the bank adds its margin, typically 2–4% for personal customers. That margin is rarely disclosed upfront and is where the vast majority of the real cost hides.
Currency brokers operate differently. They specialise exclusively in foreign exchange and compete on rate quality. Their margins are typically 0.3–0.5% above the interbank rate, and most charge no fee at all on transfers over €10,000. The practical difference is significant: on a €250,000 transfer, a bank charging a 2% margin costs you roughly €5,000 in hidden fees, while a broker at 0.5% costs around €1,250. That is a saving of €3,750 on a single transfer — more than many buyers pay in legal fees.
Real Cost Comparison
| Transfer Amount | Bank Total Cost | Broker Total Cost | You Save |
|---|---|---|---|
| €100,000 | €1,500–€2,000 | €500–€750 | €750–€1,250 |
| €250,000 | €3,500–€5,000 | €1,000–€1,500 | €2,000–€3,500 |
| €500,000 | €7,000–€10,000 | €2,000–€3,000 | €4,000–€7,000 |
The table above uses realistic estimates based on average bank spreads of 2% and broker spreads of 0.5%, including typical transfer fees. Individual costs vary by provider, currency pair, and transfer timing — but the pattern is consistent: the larger the transfer, the bigger the saving.
For property buyers, these savings appear at every stage. A reservation deposit of €20,000–€50,000 might save €300–€750 with a broker. The completion payment — often €200,000–€400,000 — is where the real difference shows. Even ongoing transfers for tax payments and community fees add up over time.
Both options are safe for large transfers when properly regulated. Banks offer deposit insurance and heavy supervision. Regulated brokers — those authorised by the FCA, ESMA, or equivalent bodies — must segregate client funds, meaning your money is protected even if the broker faces difficulties. The idea that brokers are riskier than banks is a common misconception: regulated brokers handle billions in property transfers annually and follow the same anti-money laundering requirements as banks.
For speed, brokers often have the edge. Most large transfers arrive within 1–3 business days, compared to 3–5 days for SEPA or 5–7 days for SWIFT through banks. For time-sensitive completions, this can make a real difference. See our buying process guide for the full timeline.
Mistakes to Avoid
Assuming Your Bank Is the Cheapest
Most buyers use their home bank out of habit. Banks are reliable but charge the highest margins. Always compare at least 2–3 providers before transferring.
Ignoring the Exchange Rate Spread
The real cost is in the spread, not the fee. A €25 transfer fee with a 2% spread costs far more than a €100 fee with a 0.5% spread. Always ask for the total cost including the margin.
Waiting Until Completion Day
Leaving the transfer to the last minute means you accept whatever rate the market offers. Start planning weeks in advance and consider locking in a rate with a forward contract.
Not Asking About Forward Contracts
Forward contracts let you fix an exchange rate today for a transfer weeks or months away. Most brokers offer them at no extra cost. If your completion is more than a few weeks out, this removes exchange rate risk entirely.
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