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Mid-Market vs Bank Rates

The rate in the news is not the rate you get. Here is the gap between mid-market and real-world rates — and how to size it.

Open any news app and you will see a single GBP/USD number. Try to actually exchange money and you will be offered something worse. Both are “the rate” — they just measure different things. Understanding the gap is the key to not overpaying.

What the mid-market rate is

The mid-market (or interbank) rate is the midpoint between the buy and sell prices in the wholesale market where banks trade with each other. It is the fairest single figure to quote, and it is what this site, news outlets and Google show. But it is a benchmark, not a price you can personally transact at — like the “recommended retail price” of a product rather than the till price.

How providers make money: spread and fees

Consumer providers earn their margin in two ways:

Typical gaps versus mid-market

As a rough guide for GBP/USD, a heavily-traded major pair:

How to estimate your real cost

Take the mid-market amount from our converter, then subtract the provider’s margin. On £1,000 at a 1.27 mid-market rate ($1,270), a 3% bank margin costs about $38; a 0.5% specialist costs about $6. The bigger the amount, the more the percentage matters — which is why people shop around hardest on large transfers.

The dynamic currency conversion trap

When paying by card or withdrawing cash abroad, you may be asked whether to be charged in your home currency or the local one. Always choose the local currency. Choosing your home currency triggers “dynamic currency conversion”, which lets the terminal set its own (poor) exchange rate on top of everything else.

For the practical steps, see sending money UK → USA, sending money USA → UK, and travel money tips.

FAQ

Why is my bank's GBP/USD rate worse than Google's?
Google shows the mid-market rate. Your bank adds a spread (and sometimes a fee), so you receive a rate a few percent worse. The difference is how the bank makes money on the exchange.
How much worse than mid-market is normal?
For GBP/USD, specialists are often within ~0.3–1%, high-street banks 2–4%, and airport bureaux 5–12% or more once spreads are counted.
Should I pay in pounds or dollars when abroad?
Always choose the local currency of the country you are in. Choosing your home currency triggers dynamic currency conversion at a worse rate.