TL;DR: An international bank transfer sent via the SWIFT correspondent banking network typically takes 1 to 5 business days to credit the recipient's account, with major currency corridors such as US to UK, US to EU, and US to Australia at the faster end and less-served corridors through multiple correspondent intermediaries at the slower end. Digital transfer providers including Wise and Remitly that use local payment rails at each end of the transfer typically deliver within minutes to a few hours on well-developed corridors. Transfer speed is affected by the time of initiation relative to the originating bank's daily cut-off time, the destination country's local payment network processing schedule, whether compliance screening holds are triggered, whether the recipient's bank is a direct SWIFT correspondent of the sending bank, and whether the transfer is initiated on a business day. Initiating before the bank's cut-off time on a Monday through Thursday business day maximises settlement speed for SWIFT transfers.
Why International Bank Transfers Take Time
The time an international bank transfer takes to settle is not primarily determined by technology limitations but by the architecture of the global correspondent banking system and the regulatory compliance requirements that govern cross-border money movement. When a US bank sends a SWIFT transfer to a bank in India, the payment instruction travels through the SWIFT messaging network, which is a communication system rather than a fund transfer system. The actual movement of funds occurs through the accounts that banks maintain with each other in major financial centres. If the US sending bank does not have a direct banking relationship with the Indian receiving bank, the transfer routes through one or more intermediary correspondent banks that do have such relationships. Each correspondent bank receives the SWIFT message, performs its own processing, deducts its fee, and sends a new SWIFT message to the next institution in the chain. Each of these sequential steps adds processing time, and each step occurs within the processing windows of the institution involved, meaning a transfer that arrives at a correspondent bank after its processing cut-off time waits until the next processing cycle to advance.
SWIFT Wire Transfers: Typical Settlement Times
SWIFT wire transfers between major financial centres in developed markets typically complete within one to three business days when initiated before the sending bank's cut-off time. The SWIFT messaging network itself is fast, transmitting payment instructions in seconds. The settlement delay arises from the processing cycles of correspondent banks, the time zone differences between originating and receiving financial centres, and the compliance review steps that apply to cross-border payments under international anti-money laundering frameworks. A transfer from the United States to the United Kingdom, both major financial centres with direct correspondent relationships between most commercial banks, typically credits within one to two business days. A transfer from the United States to India typically takes two to four business days through the standard SWIFT correspondent chain. Transfers to smaller markets, countries with less developed banking infrastructure, or destinations with currency controls may take three to five business days or occasionally longer if additional regulatory clearances are required in the receiving country.
International Settlement Times by Corridor
The specific corridor, meaning the combination of sending country, receiving country, and currency pair, is one of the most reliable predictors of settlement time. US to UK (USD to GBP): typically one to two business days. US to EU (USD to EUR): typically one to two business days. US to Canada (USD to CAD): typically one to two business days. US to Australia (USD to AUD): typically two to three business days due to time zone distance. US to India (USD to INR): typically two to four business days via SWIFT, with the INR conversion handled by the receiving Indian bank. US to Philippines (USD to PHP): typically two to four business days. US to Mexico (USD to MXN): typically one to two business days given the proximity and high volume of the corridor. US to Nigeria (USD to NGN): three to five business days with potential additional delays related to Central Bank of Nigeria foreign exchange regulations. US to China (USD to CNY): two to four business days, with additional compliance complexity given SWIFT's China business restrictions and the use of CIPS as an alternative interbank system for yuan settlements.
Cut-Off Times and Their Impact on Settlement Speed
Every bank and correspondent institution in the SWIFT payment chain operates with defined daily processing cut-off times after which incoming payment instructions are held for processing the following business day. For consumer and business customers, the relevant cut-off time is the sending bank's outgoing international wire cut-off, typically between 3:00 PM and 6:00 PM Eastern Time at most US banks. A transfer initiated at 5:00 PM Eastern on a Thursday that falls after the bank's 4:00 PM cut-off will not enter the SWIFT system until the following business day, Friday, effectively adding one business day to the settlement timeline. Transfers initiated on Friday afternoon after the cut-off will not process until Monday, adding a full weekend plus the Friday processing window to the effective settlement time. International public holidays in either the sending or receiving country create additional processing day gaps. A transfer from the US to a European country timed around a European national holiday, where the European correspondent bank does not process payments, will be delayed by the holiday's duration regardless of how quickly the US bank processes its outgoing instruction.
Digital Transfer Providers: Faster Alternatives to SWIFT
Digital international transfer providers including Wise, Remitly, WorldRemit, and XE deliver funds faster than SWIFT bank wires on most major corridors because they use local domestic payment rails in both the sending and receiving country rather than the SWIFT correspondent banking chain. A Wise transfer from the US to India is received by Wise's US bank account as a domestic ACH payment and disbursed from Wise's Indian banking partner as a domestic NEFT or IMPS payment. No cross-border SWIFT message is involved in the actual fund movement. The settlement time is therefore determined by the domestic payment network at each end rather than by the SWIFT correspondent chain between them. IMPS in India settles in seconds. ACH in the US settles within hours to one business day. Most Wise transfers to India complete within a few hours of the payment being processed, compared to two to four business days via SWIFT. Remitly's Express option for the US to Philippines corridor, for example, credits to major Philippine banks within minutes for card-funded transfers. These settlement improvements come alongside lower cost, making digital providers the superior choice for routine consumer international transfers on all criteria except the formal SWIFT MT103 payment confirmation that some business recipients require.
SWIFT GPI: The Improvement to Traditional Bank Wire Speed
SWIFT GPI (Global Payments Innovation), launched in 2017 and now handling over 50 percent of SWIFT cross-border payment traffic, has materially improved the speed and transparency of traditional bank SWIFT wire transfers. SWIFT GPI requires member banks to pass payment messages through the correspondent chain within defined timeframes, typically targeting same-day settlement for major corridors, and to maintain end-to-end tracking through a Unique End-to-End Transaction Reference (UETR) that allows the payment to be tracked at every step of the chain. SWIFT reports that more than 50 percent of GPI payments are credited to the end beneficiary within 30 minutes. The improvement is real but uneven: major currency corridors between large financial centres participating fully in GPI see the most significant speed improvements, while corridors through less technologically current correspondent banks may still experience multi-day settlement despite GPI participation at the originating end of the chain.
FAQs About International Bank Transfer Speed
How long does an international wire transfer take?
An international wire transfer via the SWIFT correspondent banking network typically takes 1 to 5 business days to credit the recipient's account. Major currency corridors between developed financial centres settle in 1 to 2 business days. Transfers to less-served markets or those requiring multiple correspondent bank intermediaries take 3 to 5 business days. Transfers initiated before the bank's cut-off time on a business day process the same day; those initiated after cut-off or on weekends process the next business day. Digital transfer providers using local payment rails typically deliver within minutes to a few hours on major corridors.
Why is my international transfer taking longer than expected?
Delays in international transfers typically arise from one of four causes: the transfer was initiated after the bank's cut-off time or on a weekend, a correspondent bank in the payment chain is applying additional compliance screening to the transaction, a public holiday in the sending or receiving country has paused processing, or incorrect recipient details including the SWIFT code or IBAN have caused the payment to be held pending investigation. Contact your bank's international payments team for a status update and provide the transfer reference number or UETR if available for them to trace the payment through the SWIFT system.
What is the fastest way to send an international bank transfer?
For bank-to-bank transfers specifically, initiating before the daily cut-off time at a bank participating in SWIFT GPI on a Monday through Thursday business day maximises settlement speed within the SWIFT system. For the fastest overall international money transfer, digital providers including Wise, Remitly, and WorldRemit that use local payment rails deliver significantly faster settlement than SWIFT bank wires on all major corridors, often within minutes for card-funded Express transfers. Remitly's Express option and Wise's near-instant transfer feature for qualifying corridors represent the fastest available options for most consumer remittance corridors.
Do international bank transfers process on weekends?
Most international SWIFT wire transfers do not process on weekends because the correspondent banking system and most central bank settlement systems do not operate on Saturdays and Sundays. Transfers initiated on a Friday after cut-off or on the weekend will typically begin processing on Monday morning and credit to the recipient one to three business days after that Monday processing date. Some digital providers process transfers around the clock including weekends, but may apply a small surcharge for weekend currency conversions when the forex market is closed, as Revolut does for major currency pairs. Wise processes transfers around the clock including weekends for some corridors where local payment rails are continuously operational.
Can I track an international bank transfer?
Yes. All international SWIFT wire transfers have a unique reference number provided by the sending bank. For SWIFT GPI-participating banks, a Unique End-to-End Transaction Reference (UETR) is generated that allows the payment to be tracked at each step of the correspondent banking chain through the GPI tracker. Contact your bank with the transfer reference number to request a status update. Digital transfer providers including Wise, Remitly, and WorldRemit provide real-time transfer tracking within their mobile apps, showing the current status of the transfer from initiation through to recipient account credit.
Sources
Wise: How Long Do Transfers Take: https://wise.com/help/articles/2978095/how-long-does-my-transfer-take
Remitly: Transfer Speed: https://www.remitly.com
Federal Reserve: Fedwire Funds Service: https://www.federalreserve.gov/paymentsystems/fedfunds_about.htm
OFX: International Transfer Times: https://www.ofx.com/en-us/blog/international-transfers/how-long-do-international-transfers-take/




