I am from Bank of China. If an American friend sends you an international remittance, my answer will be helpful to you. When a bank accepts international remittances, the required materials are all the same. That is:
The full English name of your bank, the English address of your bank, your account name (Pinyin), account number, SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Telecommunications) code of your bank. This code is basically available in banks all over the world. The bank where you open an account will definitely provide it. You will know it as soon as you tell it. If you go to the bank during working hours, you will definitely ask for the above information. If it is at night, you can only ask the customer service of the local bank to see if the customer service knows.
In addition, there is an international Western Union remittance. In China, it cooperates with the post office and the Agricultural Bank of China. The remittance does not require an account. It is withdrawn with the personal ID number, which is the ID card in China, and the agreed password. But this business can only be capped at $2,000.
It depends on which situation suits you.