💱 USD ↔ EUR Converter

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US Dollar (USD)
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Euro (EUR)
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Quick Amounts

📊 USD to EUR Conversion Table

Mid-market rate. Banks/cards typically charge 0.5–3% margin on top.

USD Amount Mid-Market (€) Bank Rate (~2%) Wise/Revolut (~0.5%)

📊 EUR to USD Conversion Table

EUR Amount USD (mid-market) Bank Rate (~2%)

💳 USD→EUR Transfer Options

Comparison of common methods for USD to EUR conversion. Lower margin = more euros you receive.

📱 Wise (TransferWise)0.35–0.6% margin
Best overall for most transfers. Uses mid-market rate + small percentage fee. Fast (minutes to 1 day). No hidden markup. Trusted by millions globally. Best for $100–$50,000 transfers.
💳 Revolut / N260% margin (weekdays)
Zero margin on weekday conversions up to monthly limits (varies by plan). Weekend rates include a 1% markup. Best for frequent small conversions and travel spending. Top-tier plans offer unlimited zero-margin FX.
🏦 Bank Wire (SWIFT)1.5–3% margin + $15–45 fee
Traditional banks (Chase, BoA, Wells Fargo) add 2–3% exchange rate markup plus $15–45 SWIFT wire fee. Best for very large amounts where % fee is worth it for security. Takes 1–3 business days.
💵 Airport/Hotel Kiosk5–10% margin
Worst possible rate. Avoid at all costs for significant amounts. Acceptable only for small emergency cash amounts. Dynamic currency conversion (paying in USD abroad) also falls in this category.
💳 Credit/Debit Card (Abroad)1–3% foreign transaction fee
Most credit cards charge 1–3% foreign transaction fee. Cards like Charles Schwab, Capital One 360, and Revolut offer zero foreign transaction fees. Always choose to pay in local currency (EUR) not USD when prompted - avoids dynamic currency conversion.
🔄 ECB Reference RateMid-market (base rate)
The European Central Bank publishes a daily reference rate at ~4:00 PM CET. This is the benchmark mid-market rate. No retail transactions happen at this exact rate - all commercial rates include a spread above this. Available at ecb.europa.eu.

📌 USD/EUR Key Facts (2026)

📈 What Drives EUR/USD Rate?

🏦 Federal Reserve vs ECB Policy Gap

The single biggest driver. When the Fed keeps rates high and ECB cuts (or vice versa), capital flows to the higher-yielding currency. In 2026, both are dealing with inflation - the Fed at 3.8% and the ECB facing rising Eurozone CPI. Markets expect an ECB rate hike in June 2026, which is strengthening the Euro against USD.

🛢️ Energy Prices & Iran Conflict

Europe imports ~40% of its gas and significant oil - making it highly sensitive to Middle East conflicts. The 2026 Iran crisis pushed Brent crude to ~$97/barrel, hurting the Euro as European energy import costs surged. This is why EUR/USD fell from 1.18 to 1.16 in late May 2026.

📊 US Dollar Index (DXY)

EUR makes up 57.6% of the DXY (US Dollar Index), so EUR/USD and DXY move inversely. A rising DXY means a falling EUR/USD. The DXY rose in early 2026 due to US energy inflation, but has been range-bound as both economies face similar inflation challenges.

🇩🇪 German Economic Data

Germany is the Eurozone's largest economy. German PMI, GDP, ZEW sentiment and industrial orders significantly move EUR/USD. Weak German data = weaker Euro. Germany entered a mild recession in late 2025 due to high energy costs, which has been a headwind for EUR.

⚠️ Risk Sentiment & Geopolitics

In risk-off environments (war, financial stress), investors typically flee to USD as the global reserve currency, weakening EUR/USD. The Iran conflict in 2026 has boosted USD as a safe haven. EUR/USD tends to rise when global risk appetite improves.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

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USD to EUR - Understanding EUR/USD, the World's Most Traded Currency Pair

EUR/USD is the most liquid currency pair in the world, accounting for approximately $1.2 trillion in daily trading volume - roughly 23% of all global forex turnover. When you convert dollars to euros for a European trip, wire money to a family member in Germany, or pay a European supplier, you are participating in the same market that governments, central banks, hedge funds and pension funds use to manage their currency exposure. The practical difference is that knowing how the rate works helps you avoid the hidden costs that take 3–7% of your money when you use the wrong service.

EUR at a glance: 2nd most held reserve currency globally (20% of reserves vs USD's 58%) · Used by 20 EU member states and several non-EU territories · Eurozone GDP approximately $15–16 trillion · ECB (European Central Bank) sets monetary policy independently for all Eurozone members · EUR/USD reached all-time high of $1.60 (2008) and near all-time low at parity ($1.00) in 2022

What Drives the EUR/USD Exchange Rate

🏦 Monetary Policy (Most Important)

  • Fed vs ECB rate differential: When US interest rates exceed Eurozone rates, USD assets offer higher yield - attracting capital to the US and strengthening the dollar (pushing EUR/USD lower). When ECB rates rise toward or above Fed rates, EUR strengthens.
  • Forward guidance: Markets move EUR/USD on expectations, not just current rates. If the ECB signals future hikes while the Fed signals cuts, EUR rises even before any actual rate change.
  • Inflation differentials: Higher persistent inflation in one area forces its central bank to hike more aggressively, affecting the rate. The 2022 energy crisis caused European inflation to spike faster than US inflation, pushing EUR/USD to parity.

⚡ Energy, Trade & Risk

  • Energy prices: Europe imports approximately 60% of its energy needs. High oil and gas prices hurt the European current account balance and weigh on EUR. The US is energy self-sufficient via shale, making it less exposed.
  • Global risk sentiment: During global crises, investors buy USD as the world's reserve currency safe haven - this pushes EUR/USD lower. When risk appetite is high, EUR tends to recover.
  • Trade balance: Germany's large export surplus historically supports EUR. A weakening German manufacturing sector (as in 2023–24) is EUR negative.
  • Geopolitical risk near Europe: Conflicts near the Eurozone (Russia-Ukraine, Middle East) create energy uncertainty and risk aversion, which tends to pressure EUR versus USD.

20 Countries That Use the Euro - Complete List

The Euro is the official currency of the following EU member states (the Eurozone):

  • Western Europe: France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Ireland, Portugal, Spain
  • Southern Europe: Italy, Greece, Cyprus, Malta
  • Northern Europe: Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
  • Central Europe: Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia

Additionally, these non-EU countries and territories use EUR by agreement or unilaterally: Monaco, San Marino, Vatican City, Andorra, Kosovo, Montenegro, Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, and several other French overseas collectivities. When travelling anywhere in this list, your euros work without exchange.

Spending in Europe - How to Avoid Losing Money on Currency

Americans travelling in Europe face two main currency traps, both of which are entirely avoidable:

1. Dynamic Currency Conversion (DCC) - the single biggest travel money mistake: When a card terminal in a European restaurant, hotel or shop offers to charge you in US Dollars instead of Euros, it is performing DCC. The merchant's bank converts at a deliberately poor rate - typically 3–5% worse than what your US card issuer charges. The terminal may even show you the USD amount as if it's doing you a favour by "removing the uncertainty." It is not. Always select EUR. Always. Without exception. At ATMs, always select "without conversion" or "local currency."

2. Foreign transaction fees: Most US credit and debit cards charge 2–3% on every foreign currency transaction. On a $3,000 European trip, that's $60–90 in avoidable fees on top of the exchange rate. Use a zero-fee card instead.

Best Zero-Fee Cards for Americans in Europe

  • Charles Schwab Investor Checking Debit Card: Zero foreign transaction fee, reimburses ALL ATM fees worldwide at the end of each month. The gold standard for American international travellers. Withdraw EUR from any European ATM at the Visa rate with zero fees total.
  • Chase Sapphire Preferred / Reserve: Zero foreign transaction fee on credit purchases. Points on all spend. Wide acceptance as Visa across Europe.
  • Capital One Venture / Quicksilver: Zero foreign transaction fee, miles on all purchases. Good general travel card.
  • Wise debit card: Converts at near mid-market rate. Hold EUR balance and spend at essentially no cost when pre-loaded. Best for large or frequent EUR transactions.
  • Revolut (US version): Zero fee on weekday conversions within plan limits. Useful as a secondary travel card and for budgeting visibility.

Sending Money Between the USA and Europe - Ranked by Rate

  1. Wise: Approximately 0.35–0.6% above mid-market. Direct bank-to-bank transfer. Fast (often same-day within EU SEPA zone). FinCEN regulated in the US. Most transparent fee structure. Best overall for EUR transfers.
  2. Revolut: Near mid-market rate on weekday conversions within plan allowance. Free plan has limits; paid plans go higher. Good for regular moderate-amount transfers.
  3. OFX: Competitive for large amounts (above $10,000). No transfer fee. Flat percentage margin. Good for regular business payments to European suppliers.
  4. CurrencyFair: Peer-to-peer exchange model - you match with someone converting in the opposite direction. Can achieve very close to mid-market on liquid pairs like EUR/USD.
  5. Bank international wire (US to EU): 1.5–3% margin plus $15–45 SWIFT fee plus potential €10–20 intermediary bank fee. Only for very large amounts or where banking relationship documentation is required.
  6. Airport exchange kiosks (Travelex, ICE): Never use for significant amounts - margins of 5–10% are standard. For genuine emergencies only.

EUR/USD Historical Context - The Rate's Story

EUR/USD has a surprisingly dramatic history since the Euro launched in January 1999:

  • 1999–2000: EUR launched at $1.17 but immediately fell below parity, touching $0.83 by October 2000 as the US dotcom boom drove exceptional USD demand.
  • 2002–2008: EUR staged a major recovery, rising from $0.86 to an all-time high of $1.60 in July 2008 as the US housing bubble burst and current account deficits widened.
  • 2010–2012 (Eurozone debt crisis): EUR fell sharply as Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy faced sovereign debt crises. EUR/USD fell from $1.51 to $1.21.
  • 2022 (energy crisis + parity): Russia's invasion of Ukraine triggered an energy shock that hurt Europe far more than the US. Simultaneously, the Fed hiked rates aggressively while the ECB moved slowly. EUR/USD fell to parity ($1.00) for the first time in 20 years in July 2022.
  • 2023–2026: EUR recovered as ECB hiked rates aggressively. EUR/USD has generally traded in the $1.05–$1.20 range with both central banks in complex easing cycles.