Comparison · Time-sensitive
Cheapest way to send money to the Philippines (USD→PHP)
There is no single “cheapest” service to the Philippines. It depends on the amount, the delivery method, and the day’s exchange rate. What is fixed is how to compare them: total cost is the fee plus the FX margin, the gap between the rate given and the mid-market rate. Comparing only the headline fee is how the real cost hides. Posted terms, ordered by typical total cost for a bank deposit, anchored to the World Bank US→PH corridor:
| Service | Posted total cost (USD→PHP) | Typical speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wise | Mid-market rate + transparent fee, typically ~0.6%–1.2% (≈ $4–7 on $1,000) | Bank deposit ~1–2 business days | Generally lowest total cost for bank deposit |
| Remitly (Economy) | Near-free tier; standard rate competitive | ~3–5 business days | First-time senders usually get a promo rate |
| Remitly (Express) | Higher cost than Economy | Minutes, to cash / GCash | Strong PH corridor; faster, costs more |
| Western Union | FX margin wider than Wise; online bank-funded fees can start near $0 on small amounts | Cash pickup in minutes | Largest agent network; widest physical reach for cash/unbanked recipients |
What “total cost” actually is
A remittance has two prices, and only one of them is shown in big type. The first is the transfer fee, the flat or percentage charge the service names up front. The second is the FX margin: the difference between the exchange rate the sender is given and the mid-market rate, the no-margin reference rate. A service can advertise a $0 fee and still be the most expensive on the corridor because the margin is buried in the rate. The World Bank Remittance Prices Worldwide US→PH corridor exists to put both into one number, total cost as a percentage of the amount sent, which is the only basis the table above is ordered by.
This is also why two services quoting the same fee can deliver different pesos for the same dollars. The fee is comparable at a glance; the margin is not, and the margin is usually the larger of the two on a mid-size transfer. The figure that settles it is the pesos the recipient actually receives for a specific amount on a specific day, fee and margin already combined.
The providers, by posted terms
What the corridor and the providers’ own pages post, as of 2026-05-16. Provider pages are corroboration; the impartial anchor is the World Bank corridor.
Wise
Wise converts at the mid-market rate and charges a separate, stated fee. Its posted total cost USD→PHP is typically ~0.6%–1.2% (roughly $4–7 on $1,000), and a bank deposit usually arrives in about 1–2 business days. For a bank deposit at mid-size amounts, that is generally the lowest total cost on the corridor, because there is no margin hidden in the rate to add to the fee. It is a bank-deposit-first service, not built around cash pickup to an unbanked recipient.
Remitly — Economy vs Express
Remitly posts two tiers, and they answer different questions. Economy is a near-free tier with a competitive standard rate, delivering in about 3–5 business days. It is not always the cheapest, but it is in the low range when speed is not the priority. Express delivers in minutes to cash or GCash and costs more than Economy; the speed is the thing being paid for, not a different exchange rate advantage. Remitly has a strong Philippine corridor with GCash and cash-pickup options. One distortion to name: first-time senders are almost always given a promo rate, so a one-off first comparison can look better than the standard rate on every transfer after it.
Western Union
Western Union’s posted FX margin is wider than Wise’s, but two things offset that for specific cases. Online, bank-funded fees can start near $0 on small amounts. And its agent network is the largest of the three for the Philippines, with cash pickup in minutes. For a recipient who is rural, unbanked, or needs cash that day, network reach can matter more than a small FX difference. It is the cash-and-reach option, not the lowest-margin one.
What this means for $200, $500, $1,000
The most-searched version of this question fixes an amount. The corridor posts the cost as a percentage, which is what lets it carry across amounts: the sanctioned figure is Wise at ~0.6%–1.2% total cost, ≈ $4–7 on $1,000 for a bank deposit (World Bank US→PH corridor, checked 2026-05-16). On smaller transfers a flat fee component weighs heavier as a percentage, so the rate on $200 is usually a larger share than on $1,000; on larger transfers the FX margin dominates and the percentage is what to watch, not the flat fee. The corridor does not post a fixed per-amount table because every provider’s fee and margin move daily, which is exactly why the exact figure for a specific amount is the one quoted live on the provider’s page that day, not a number memorised here.
The mechanism is easier to see worked through, and it matters where the money is lost. A transfer can cost on the send side (the flat fee the sender pays out of pocket), on the receive side (the FX margin, which the recipient absorbs as fewer pesos than the mid-market rate would have given, and any payout fee an agent or bank clips on collection), or on both at once. A “free” transfer with a wide FX margin still loses money — it has just moved the loss from the sender’s side to the recipient’s. Total cost is the two sides added together.
The table below is an illustrative example, not posted or quoted rates — it holds a flat fee and an FX margin fixed across three amounts so the shape is visible: the same dollar fee is a heavier percentage on a small transfer, and the percentage cost falls as the amount rises even though the dollar cost climbs.
| Amount sent | Send-side fee (example) | Receive-side FX loss (example) | Total cost (USD) | Total cost (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $200 | $2.00 | $1.00 | $3.00 | 1.5% |
| $500 | $2.00 | $2.50 | $4.50 | 0.9% |
| $1,000 | $2.00 | $5.00 | $7.00 | 0.7% |
Delivery method changes the answer
The cheapest service is not a single name because it changes with how the money is collected:
- Bank deposit rewards a low FX margin, since there is time and no cash-handling cost. This is where a mid-market-rate service tends to carry the lowest total cost.
- Cash pickup to an unbanked recipient rewards agent-network reach; a wider margin can be the trade for money that is collectable in minutes in a town with no bank branch.
- E-wallet (GCash) sits between the two: fast like cash, but routed digitally; Remitly and others post GCash delivery on the PH corridor.
The recipient’s situation, not only the sender’s preference, decides which column of the table applies.
Speed is priced
At the same provider, the fast tier costs more than the slow one. Remitly Express (minutes) is priced above Remitly Economy (about 3–5 business days) for the same corridor. Across methods, the World Bank corridor’s timing picture is consistent: cash and e-wallet transfers typically land in minutes to about a day, bank deposits in roughly 1–5 business days depending on provider and tier. Transfers started during Philippine business hours (Mon–Fri, 9–5 PHT) clear faster than ones sent over a weekend or a holiday, because the receiving side has to be open too. Speed is a real cost line, not a free upgrade. A “cheapest” comparison only holds within the same delivery speed.
Why this is anchored to the World Bank corridor
Every figure here is read against the World Bank Remittance Prices Worldwide US→Philippines corridor, the impartial cross-provider tracker, and the provider pages are treated as corroboration only, never the sole source for a number. That ordering matters because a provider’s own page is built to present its own pricing favourably, and because first-time promo rates distort the first number a sender ever sees. The corridor is the neutral anchor; the provider page is where the exact, current figure for a specific amount is then confirmed.
How to read this
This is information, not advice. What the sourced data supports:
- For a bank deposit, a mid-market-rate service tends to carry the lowest total cost.
- For cash pickup to an unbanked recipient, agent-network reach can outweigh a small FX difference.
- Speed is priced: the minutes tiers sit above the multi-day tiers at the same provider.
Rates move daily and promo rates distort first transfers, so the durable number is the standard posted total cost, not a one-time rate. Quoting the exact amount on 2–3 services on the same day and comparing the pesos the recipient actually receives is information, not a recommendation. It is simply how the hidden half of the cost becomes visible.
For how long each method takes to arrive, see how long a remittance takes. For why apps, banks and padala centers price the same transfer differently, see apps vs banks vs padala centers.
Questions, answered
- What is the cheapest way to send money to the Philippines?
- There is no single cheapest — it depends on the amount, the delivery method, and the day’s FX. On the World Bank US→PH corridor (checked 2026-05-16), for a bank deposit Wise’s posted total cost is typically ~0.6–1.2% (≈ $4–7 on $1,000), the mid-market rate plus a transparent fee, and generally the lowest total cost for that method. For cash pickup to an unbanked recipient, Western Union’s agent-network reach can outweigh its wider FX margin. Total cost is the fee plus the FX margin; quoting the exact amount on 2–3 services the same day is the only way to see the real number.
- Is Wise cheaper than Western Union for sending to the Philippines?
- For a bank deposit, the World Bank US→PH corridor (checked 2026-05-16) shows Wise at the mid-market rate plus a transparent fee, typically ~0.6–1.2% (≈ $4–7 on $1,000) — generally the lowest total cost for that method. Western Union’s FX margin is wider than Wise’s, though its online bank-funded fees can start near $0 on small amounts and its agent network is the largest for cash pickup. Which is cheaper depends on the amount and on whether the recipient takes a bank deposit or cash; total cost, not the headline fee, is the comparison.
- What is the fee to send $1,000 to the Philippines?
- There is no single fixed fee — it is the transfer fee plus the FX margin combined. On the World Bank US→PH corridor (checked 2026-05-16), Wise’s posted total cost for a $1,000 bank deposit is typically ~0.6–1.2%, about $4–7, at the mid-market rate plus a transparent fee. Remitly’s Economy tier is near-free with a competitive standard rate; its Express tier costs more for minutes-fast delivery. Rates move daily and first-time promo rates distort one-off comparisons, so the figure for an exact amount is the one quoted on the provider’s page that day.
- How long does a remittance to the Philippines take?
- On the World Bank US→PH corridor (checked 2026-05-16), cash pickup and e-wallet (GCash) transfers typically land in minutes to about a day, while bank deposits take roughly 1–5 business days depending on provider and tier — Wise bank deposit about 1–2 business days, Remitly Economy about 3–5. Transfers started during Philippine business hours (Mon–Fri, 9–5 PHT) clear faster than ones sent over a weekend or holiday. Arrival speed by method is covered in full on the how-long-a-remittance-takes page.
- Does the first-time promo rate make a service the cheapest?
- Not reliably. Most providers, Remitly included, apply a promotional rate to a sender’s first transfer, which makes a one-off comparison look better than the rate on later transfers (World Bank US→PH corridor, checked 2026-05-16). The durable comparison is the standard posted total cost — fee plus FX margin — not the promo. Quoting the exact amount on 2–3 services the same day, and noting which figure is a first-time promo, is how the lasting cost is seen rather than a one-time rate.
Sources — checked, dated
Sourced & dated information — not financial or immigration advice. Our sources & ranking policy.