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Previously on "What is most efficient way to receive EUR payments?"

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  • FrontEnder
    replied
    Originally posted by garnet View Post
    Ask (any) bank I they can open a EUR account with a debit card attached to it. Best a master card debit card.
    In this case when you use your card (except for ATM withdrawals perhaps) it will be the MC exchange rate which is excellent.

    I highly doubt there is a UK product out there where you can do this.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lumiere
    replied
    Originally posted by stek View Post
    You need to register for EC Sales List on Government Gateway, include no VAT and put the agents VAT number on the invoice.

    Note that the EC list quarters run Jan-Mar etc, which might stagger with your normal VAT returns.
    My normal VAT returns period is the same. So for work done now I will have to send ECL in the period of 1-14 July, as I understand.

    Leave a comment:


  • stek
    replied
    Originally posted by Lumiere View Post
    That's what I wanted to do, but they wouldn't give me today's date to compare, saying it is dynamic.

    Trying to decide whether opening the EUR account is worth the hassle for a couple of months' worth of invoices.

    Any idea on VAT ? As I understand you don't put VAT in invoices if working on-site in Europe. I am quite happy with this as there are no extra exchange rate losses and you are not being punished for being on the flat rate. But being one week there one week here is slightly different perhaps ?
    You need to register for EC Sales List on Government Gateway, include no VAT and put the agents VAT number on the invoice.

    Note that the EC list quarters run Jan-Mar etc, which might stagger with your normal VAT returns.

    Leave a comment:


  • northernladuk
    replied
    Originally posted by garnet View Post
    Ask (any) bank I they can open a EUR account with a debit card attached to it. Best a master card debit card.
    In this case when you use your card (except for ATM withdrawals perhaps) it will be the MC exchange rate which is excellent.
    Business account?

    Leave a comment:


  • garnet
    replied
    Ask (any) bank I they can open a EUR account with a debit card attached to it. Best a master card debit card.
    In this case when you use your card (except for ATM withdrawals perhaps) it will be the MC exchange rate which is excellent.

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by psychocandy View Post
    Be aware:-
    1. Paying euros into sterling account will cost an arm and a leg.
    2. Transferring from euro to sterling account for same bank will still be a crap rate.
    Use bank's trading desk to get good rates...

    Leave a comment:


  • Lumiere
    replied
    Originally posted by psychocandy View Post
    Just compare to currencyfair and work out if its worth the hassle.
    That's what I wanted to do, but they wouldn't give me today's date to compare, saying it is dynamic.

    Trying to decide whether opening the EUR account is worth the hassle for a couple of months' worth of invoices.

    Any idea on VAT ? As I understand you don't put VAT in invoices if working on-site in Europe. I am quite happy with this as there are no extra exchange rate losses and you are not being punished for being on the flat rate. But being one week there one week here is slightly different perhaps ?

    Leave a comment:


  • psychocandy
    replied
    Originally posted by Lumiere View Post
    Was told in HSBC chat that:

    1. Paying euros into sterling account will cost an arm and a leg. - flat £8 given sender pays payment charges (I suppose they do).
    2. Transferring from euro to sterling account for same bank will still be a crap rate. - she said no fee and market rate but couldn't tell what was the current one for today to compare. If you send an international payment you see it on screen, active for a few minutes to acccept .. that one was far from "market" as I remember.
    Not just the fees its the rate. Of course, they;re going to say market rate they're not going to say crap rate. It will be crap believe me. Just compare to currencyfair and work out if its worth the hassle.

    Leave a comment:


  • geoffreywhereveryoumaybe
    replied
    Use a Broker to convert

    I had a Euro account with HSBC (cost about £8 a month). Receive payments in Euro and when the rate is right, use brokers such as Caxton or Hargreaves Landsdown to transfer across and you get a much better exchange rate and you can convert when the rate is right.

    Leave a comment:


  • jamesbrown
    replied
    Originally posted by Platypus View Post
    FWIW I receive payments in USD, have done for years. The US just sends the money to my Barclays UK GBP business account and the exchange rate seems pretty fair. It arrives next day as GBP in my account. Easy. I haven't bothered getting a USD account although over the years I daresay if I'd be savvy I could have timed my exchanges to get a few more quid.

    Last time I did this (start of April 2016), the exchange rate the bank gave me was 1.4758 vs. the mid-market rate of 1.4205 so I guess they take about 5.5c. Now that I do the maths (for the first time in years) the bank nabs £260 per $10,000

    I do remember talking to the bank when I opened the account and IIRC they'd get their 5c whether converted at the time of payment or if I put it in a USD account and convert it later.

    Cost of sale I guess
    Seriously, you should look into opening a USD account. It's straightforward. You can then decide whether you want to go to the next level and transfer via an intermediary (such as Oanda or HiFX) to get the best rate, but you may find that Barclays offer decent rates for larger transfers. If you don't want to bother with a broker, Cater Allen have decent default rates on their internal transfers between GBP and USD/EUR accounts (around 1%, typically, for Cable from the spot price, but the spot is fixed once per day, so you can sometimes get even better than spot on a volatile day ). I expect it has saved me thousands over the years and, once the account is open, it is no more hassle than managing any other account.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lumiere
    replied
    Originally posted by psychocandy View Post
    Open EURO account with current bank. Get paid into this. Create currencyfair account. Pay euro total into this. Exchange. Pay sterling back into main account.

    Be aware:-
    1. Paying euros into sterling account will cost an arm and a leg.
    2. Transferring from euro to sterling account for same bank will still be a crap rate.
    Was told in HSBC chat that:

    1. Paying euros into sterling account will cost an arm and a leg. - flat £8 given sender pays payment charges (I suppose they do).
    2. Transferring from euro to sterling account for same bank will still be a crap rate. - she said no fee and market rate but couldn't tell what was the current one for today to compare. If you send an international payment you see it on screen, active for a few minutes to acccept .. that one was far from "market" as I remember.

    Leave a comment:


  • psychocandy
    replied
    Open EURO account with current bank. Get paid into this. Create currencyfair account. Pay euro total into this. Exchange. Pay sterling back into main account.

    Be aware:-
    1. Paying euros into sterling account will cost an arm and a leg.
    2. Transferring from euro to sterling account for same bank will still be a crap rate.

    Leave a comment:


  • Platypus
    replied
    FWIW I receive payments in USD, have done for years. The US just sends the money to my Barclays UK GBP business account and the exchange rate seems pretty fair. It arrives next day as GBP in my account. Easy. I haven't bothered getting a USD account although over the years I daresay if I'd be savvy I could have timed my exchanges to get a few more quid.

    Last time I did this (start of April 2016), the exchange rate the bank gave me was 1.4758 vs. the mid-market rate of 1.4205 so I guess they take about 5.5c. Now that I do the maths (for the first time in years) the bank nabs £260 per $10,000

    I do remember talking to the bank when I opened the account and IIRC they'd get their 5c whether converted at the time of payment or if I put it in a USD account and convert it later.

    Cost of sale I guess

    Leave a comment:


  • northernladuk
    replied
    Originally posted by Lumiere View Post
    No worries, I read all those threads from several years ago and the one from last week.
    There are some useful bits on information but no definite answer, as usual.
    Yeah, tends to be the way of the internet forum. I can't help any further though sorry.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lumiere
    replied
    Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
    We had a question similar to this last week and a couple of others in the past so I've done a quick search that might help. Some of them are a bit old but the process could still be valid. See if you can find anything useful here?

    https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=EU...D-XOgAbGl5DoCA
    No worries, I read all those threads from several years ago and the one from last week.
    There are some useful bits on information but no definite answer, as usual.

    Leave a comment:

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