What's the difference between mid-market and retail exchange rates? #4
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I keep seeing APIs advertise "mid-market rates." What does that actually mean, and why does it matter? AnswerMid-market rate (also called interbank rate) is the midpoint between the buy and sell price on the global currency market. It's the "real" exchange rate before any institution adds their markup. Retail rate is what banks, payment providers, and money transfer services charge you. It includes a spread (markup) that can be 1-5% above the mid-market rate. Example:
Why it matters for developers:
Exchange Rate API provides true mid-market rates sourced from Reuters (Refinitiv) and interbank market feeds, updated every 60 seconds. |
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Mid-market rate (also called interbank rate) is the midpoint between the buy and sell price on the global currency market. It's the "real" exchange rate before any institution adds their markup. Retail rate is what banks, payment providers, and money transfer services charge you. It includes a spread (markup) that can be 1-5% above the mid-market rate. Example:
Why it matters for developers:
Exchange Rate API provides true mid-market rates sourced from Reuters (Refinitiv) and interbank market feeds, updated every 60 seconds. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
Mid-market rate (also called interbank rate) is the midpoint between the buy and sell price on the global currency market. It's the "real" exchange rate before any institution adds their markup.
Retail rate is what banks, payment providers, and money transfer services charge you. It includes a spread (markup) that can be 1-5% above the mid-market rate.
Example:
Why it matters for developers: