1. Bank of China:
If it is a cash remittance, a one-thousandth handling fee will be charged, with a minimum of 50 yuan and a maximum of 260 yuan. In addition, you have to pay a telegraph fee of 150 yuan, which is 80 yuan for Hong Kong and Taiwan. If it is a cash remittance, in addition to the above fees, the exchange rate difference will also be added, which is generally about 1% for US dollars and about 3% for British pounds.
2. Industrial and Commercial Bank of China:
The handling fee for cash remittance is one thousandth of the remittance amount, with a minimum of 20 yuan and a maximum of 200 yuan. In addition, you have to pay a telegraph fee of 100 yuan, and the handling fee is generally between 120-300 yuan.
3. China Merchants Bank:
Overseas remittance fees include: 80 yuan postage and telecommunications fee + one thousandth of the outbound remittance handling fee, with a minimum of 50 yuan. If the remittance is in cash, a banknote transfer fee of 0.25/1000 will be charged.
4. Bank of Communications:
Overseas remittance fees include handling fees, which are one thousandth of the remittance amount, plus a telegraph fee of 150 yuan. The customer chooses to pay in RMB or US dollars.
5. International silver mail (handled by the post office):
The maximum amount of each remittance order is 2,011 US dollars, and the remittance fee is 90 yuan + 11 US dollars. If there is a postscript, a postscript fee will be charged. 2 US dollars, the fee is 90 yuan + 13 US dollars, the total is about 180 yuan. You can process up to 5 orders at the same time in a day, which means you can remit 10,000 US dollars (the city where I live is 5, and people at the post office said that in some places it is 20,000 US dollars). The above charges are for each order.
In comparison, you can see that international silver mail is cheap and cost-effective.
The following is a list of issues you need to pay attention to when handling international bank mail:
First prepare the U.S. dollars you want to remit. Now it is very convenient to exchange U.S. dollars (whether you go to the bank to buy foreign exchange or go to the bank door The ICBC in my city can exchange RMB for foreign exchange with only my valid identity certificate and after declaring the purpose of purchasing foreign exchange (generally filling in the purpose of overseas travel) at the ICBC in my city. The annual limit is US$20,000, and I think it was recently increased to US$50,000.)
International silver mail accepts US dollars directly. So bring enough US dollars.
The fee for each remittance order (a remittance order can be filled in at most 2011 US dollars), of which 90 yuan is handed over to the post office counter on the spot. If there is a postscript, an additional 2 US dollars will be charged (note the postscript fee The post office counter charges US dollars, not RMB), ***90 RMB + 2 US dollars. The other 11 US dollars was collected by Deutsche Bank, an overseas intermediary bank.
That is to say, if you want to receive 2,000 US dollars, you need to prepare 2013 US dollars = (2 US dollars postscript fee + 11 US dollars foreign intermediary bank deductions). The amount that will be credited to your account is: 2013 USD - USD 2 (postscript fee) - USD 11 (overseas intermediary bank handling fee) = USD 2,000.