Introduction / Who is it for
Sending money from the USA to Poland is a common need for the Polish diaspora. Traditional banks are expensive and slow — modern transfer services (Wise, Remitly, Sendwave) offer better rates and lower fees. This guide compares the most popular options.
Main Transfer Services (2026)
Wise (formerly TransferWise)
- Rate: mid-market — the best on the market
- Fee: 1.5-3% of the amount (usually ~5-25 USD)
- Time: a few minutes to 1-2 days
- Limit: ~50,000 USD/day (depends on payment method)
- Payment Method: ACH transfer, debit card, crypto
- Pros: transparency, no hidden costs, multi-currency account option
- Cons: requires identity verification (passport, SSN/ITIN)
Remitly
- Rate: 1-2% markup over mid-market (worse than Wise)
- Fee: 2-4 USD for Express, 0 USD for Economy
- Time: 5 minutes (Express) or 3-5 days (Economy)
- Limit: 2,999 USD unverified / 30,000+ USD verified
- Method: debit card, credit card, bank account
- Pros: very fast Express transfers, mobile app
- Cons: worse rate than Wise
Western Union (WU)
- Rate: 3-5% markup — the worst of those compared
- Fee: 5-50 USD depending on the amount and method
- Time: a few minutes to several days
- Limit: 7,500 USD online unverified; significantly more with verification
- Method: debit/credit card online, cash at agency
- Pros: 500,000+ cash pickup points in Poland, can be picked up without an account
- Cons: worst exchange rate, expensive
MoneyGram
- Similar to WU — cash pickup points
- Rate ~3% markup
- Fees 5-20 USD
- Fast (a few minutes to a few hours)
Revolut
- Rate: mid-market during business hours; 1% markup on weekends
- Fee: 0 USD up to free limit (depending on plan); then 0.5%
- Time: instant (between Revolut accounts) or 1 day (external bank)
- Pros: multi-currency account, multi-currency card
- Cons: availability of US accounts is limited
Traditional Banks (Chase, BofA, Wells Fargo)
- Rate: 4-6% markup — very poor
- Fee: 25-50 USD for international transfer
- Time: 2-5 business days
- Pros: everything from one account
- Cons: worst value for money
What to Choose for Different Amounts
- Up to 500 USD, quickly: Remitly Express or Wise debit card
- 500-5,000 USD, cheapest: Wise (ACH transfer)
- 5,000+ USD, regularly: Wise from a business account or Revolut Premium
- Cash pickup in Poland: Western Union or MoneyGram
- Multiple small (family monthly): Wise + ACH (cheapest)
Step by Step: Wise (Example of the Cheapest Option)
- Register at wise.com from the USA
- Verify identity (passport, SSN, proof of address) — 1-2 days
- Enter the amount in USD and the recipient's country (Poland)
- The system will show the exact rate and amount in PLN to be received
- Select the payment method — ACH (free, 1-2 days) or debit (instant, 0.4-1.4% fee)
- Enter recipient's details — IBAN of the Polish account + first name + last name
- Confirm and send
- You will receive tracking and an estimated delivery time
Required Recipient Information in Poland
- IBAN of the Polish account (PL + 26 digits)
- First and last name as per the bank (must be exact!)
- Address (sometimes optional)
- BIC/SWIFT of the recipient's bank (usually Wise collects automatically)
Limits and Reporting to the IRS
Online transfer limits:
- Wise: ~50,000 USD/transfer (after full verification)
- Remitly: 30,000 USD/transfer (verified)
- WU: 5,000-50,000 USD depending on verification
IRS Reporting:
- Transfers over 10,000 USD at once — the bank/service reports to FinCEN (CTR report)
- Transfers over 100,000 USD to a person outside the USA — Form 3520 required in annual tax return
- Having a foreign account worth 10,000+ USD — FBAR required (FinCEN 114)
Tax Aspect
- Helping family (parents, siblings): usually not considered income for the recipient in Poland. Over 30,000 PLN in 5 years — reporting to the tax office (SD-Z2).
- Loan repayment: not considered income; it's advisable to have loan documents
- From the USA's perspective: gifts up to 18,000 USD/year/recipient (2026) are exempt from Gift Tax
Security
- Check recipient details 2x — a mistake in IBAN may mean the transfer cannot be recovered
- Never send money to a "Polish lawyer" you heard about from an unsolicited email
- WU/MoneyGram are popular among scammers — the recipient receives cash immediately and without a trace
- Enable 2FA on your transfer service account
Common Mistakes
- Using a traditional bank instead of Wise — you overpay 50-100 USD on a 1,000 USD transfer
- IBAN mistake (return after 1-2 weeks, fee 15-30 USD)
- Recipient's name mistake — some banks reject
- Selecting "credit card" as the payment method (expensive + treated as cash advance)
- Sending 10 transfers of 999 USD instead of one 9,990 USD (structuring to avoid reporting — illegal)
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