The "zero fee" trick: where transfer costs actually hide
No company converts your dollars to rupees for free. When the fee says zero, the cost has simply moved somewhere you're not looking — inside the exchange rate itself.
The two places a transfer can charge you
Every remittance has exactly two costs. The first is the explicit fee — the number providers print in large type, because it's easy to make small. The second is the FX margin: the gap between the mid-market rate (what banks trade at, the rate you see on Google) and the rate you're actually given. That gap is invisible unless you go looking.
A worked example
Say the mid-market rate is 278.6 rupees per dollar and you're sending $500. Two offers land in front of you:
- Provider A: "No fees!" — rate 274.6. Your family receives ₨137,300.
- Provider B: $3.00 fee — rate 277.1. Your family receives ₨137,719.
The "free" transfer delivered ₨419 less. Provider A took roughly ₨2,000 through the rate — about four dollars per hundred sent — while advertising zero. Neither provider lied; one just chose the label you'd read and the other the label you wouldn't.
The only number that can't mislead you is rupees delivered for what you pay — fees and rate folded together.
Why the winner changes with the amount
Fixed fees make this a moving target. A $10 fee is 5% of a $200 send but 1% of a $1,000 send, so a provider with a great rate and a chunky fee climbs the ranking as your amount grows. This is why RemitPK re-ranks every provider live as you type your exact amount — a table computed for someone else's amount is a table about someone else's money.
How to protect yourself in two seconds
- Ignore the fee line. Ignore the advertised rate. Find the amount received.
- Divide it by what you're paying. That's your true rate.
- Compare that number across providers — or let RemitPK's calculator do exactly this arithmetic across 21 providers at once, with a Fee X-ray showing each one's split between explicit fee and hidden margin.
