A multi-currency account is essential for anyone with cross-border life — frequent travelers, freelancers paid in multiple currencies, expats, digital nomads. The 2010s gave us fintechs that solved this problem far better than traditional banks. In 2026, the question is which one fits your specific use case.
Here's the comparison of the four most-used in 2026.
What changed in 2026
- Wise added 12 new currencies for "local account details" — the feature that makes you look local to receivers in those countries.
- Revolut achieved banking license in EU and US, expanding from EMI status. Customer-fund protections strengthened.
- HSBC Global Money is largely unchanged — capable but tied to HSBC banking relationship.
- Schwab International account remains best for US investors with no foreign-transaction fee on debit card and free wires.
Wise Multi-Currency Account
- Hold balances in 50+ currencies; receive in 9+ via local account details (USD, GBP, EUR, AUD, CAD, NZD, SGD, HKD, JPY plus growing)
- FX between currencies: 0.4–0.6% above mid-market
- Free debit card; ATM withdrawals 2 free / month then 2% fee
- Interest on USD/GBP/EUR balances (4.10% / 4.10% / 3.10% in May 2026 via partnership)
- No monthly fee
- Best for: freelancers receiving in multiple currencies, frequent international transfers, mid-balance multi-currency holders
Revolut Premium / Metal
- Hold and convert 30+ currencies
- FX-free up to monthly limit (Premium: $5k/month; Metal: unlimited within reason)
- Travel insurance, lounge access (Metal), cashback on debit
- Premium: ~$10/month; Metal: ~$15/month
- Free instant transfers in-network
- Best for: travelers, frequent FX traders, expat household management
HSBC Global Money Account
- Integrated with HSBC banking (Premier customers especially)
- Hold and transfer between 8+ currencies
- FX rates: HSBC's standard rates — typically 1.0–1.5% above mid-market for retail
- No fee for HSBC Premier; small fees for non-Premier
- Best for: existing HSBC banking customers wanting consolidated multi-currency
Schwab International Account
- US-domiciled brokerage account
- Free wires (incoming and outgoing)
- Schwab Investor Card refunds all foreign ATM fees (worldwide)
- No FX margin on the debit card itself (tied to Visa rate)
- Free incoming international wires
- Not a multi-currency holding (USD-only) but the FX-free debit makes it work for travel
- Best for: US travelers and expats, especially those keeping USD-denominated investments
What "multi-currency account" actually means
True multi-currency:
- Hold balances in different currencies natively
- Receive in different currencies (with local account details)
- Convert between them at low cost
Pseudo-multi-currency (less useful for serious cross-border life):
- USD account that allows international charges (with FX markup)
- "Foreign currency CDs" with no transactional flexibility
Wise and Revolut do true multi-currency. HSBC Global Money is true. Schwab International is technically pseudo (USD only), but practically excellent for US-based travel.
Comparison: features by provider
| Provider |
Currencies |
FX cost |
Monthly fee |
Local account details |
| Wise |
50+ |
0.4–0.6% |
$0 |
9+ currencies |
| Revolut Premium |
30+ |
0% (limited) |
~$10 |
EUR, GBP, USD |
| Revolut Metal |
30+ |
0% (effectively unlimited) |
~$15 |
EUR, GBP, USD |
| HSBC Global Money |
8+ |
1–1.5% |
$0 (Premier) |
Limited |
| Schwab International |
USD only |
0% on debit card |
$0 |
USD US-domestic |
How to pick by use case
- Freelancer paid in USD/EUR/GBP: Wise — local account details mean clients pay you "domestically" in each currency
- Frequent traveler / digital nomad: Wise + Revolut Premium combo (Wise for FX, Revolut for travel benefits)
- US expat in Europe: Schwab International + Wise
- HSBC Premier customer (existing): HSBC Global Money + Wise for low-cost FX
- Crypto-friendly multi-currency: Revolut (limited crypto trading included)
What to skip
- Big-bank "Premier" accounts at $25–50/month if you're not using the relationship benefits (mortgage, wealth management)
- PayPal as primary multi-currency — high FX margins (3–4%), withdrawal fees, account holds
- Fintech accounts without banking license for large balances — verify safeguarding rules
What to consider beyond fees
- Customer service quality — when a transfer fails or account is locked, response time matters. Wise and HSBC tend better; Revolut historically slow on support.
- Account stability — Revolut has had occasional account-freeze issues that resolved within days but caused stress.
- Reporting / tax — Wise has clean transaction exports; Revolut historically less so.
- Investment integration — Revolut and Schwab offer integrated investing; Wise doesn't.
FAQ
Are these accounts safe?
Wise: regulated EMI / FinCEN. Funds safeguarded in segregated accounts. Revolut: now banking-licensed in EU/US. HSBC: regulated bank. Schwab: SIPC protected (securities, not cash). All have meaningful protections; understand the specifics for large balances.
Can I have an account if I'm not a citizen / resident of the country?
Wise: most countries supported. Revolut: depends on your country. HSBC Premier: requires HSBC relationship (with citizenship / residency rules per country). Schwab International: US ties typically required.
What about cryptocurrency in these?
Revolut allows crypto trading within the app at modest spreads. Wise does not. HSBC and Schwab do not for retail (HSBC is anti-crypto by policy).
Where to go next
For related guides see Wise vs Revolut vs Payoneer in 2026, Send money internationally cheap in 2026, and Best European savings accounts in 2026.