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- Oct 5, 2006
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Gypsy|1409725125|3743892 said:Pre-loved I don't know. But if I was the seller, then I'd assume the buyer would. As for the vendors, I've always paid the fee myself.
Phoenix|1409728744|3743908 said:Gypsy|1409725125|3743892 said:Pre-loved I don't know. But if I was the seller, then I'd assume the buyer would. As for the vendors, I've always paid the fee myself.
Gypsy, do you mean BOTH the sender's and recipient's fees?
smitcompton|1409760661|3744077 said:Hi,
I don't understand why the recipient would be charged a fee. The transfer just comes in as a deposit to a bank account. I know of no bank that charges to take your money. I'm like DF--my bank doesn't charge wire transfers either way. If your bank charges you a fee to transfer, thats on you.
Annette
I'm wondering if added fees are assessed, if it could be that these transfers are international. If I have purchased an item overseas and put it on my credit card, a small additional charge gets tacked on to my bill. Thats quite the usual for my CC company to do that.
Are there any money exchange rates that might come into play?
That's my experience for sending money from Hong Kong to the US, too. Both parties get charged a fee and you get a crummy exchange rate to boot.arkieb1 said:I don't think that is true. I pay an exchange rate fee in Australia (which varies each day and they always give you a much lower rate than the actual real rate just to rip us off more) + I pay a fee for the wire transfer to an Aussie bank or company. Then some banks, (not all) but a lot of them now in the US charge the vendor (companies and private individuals) a fee to put the money from an International source into their bank. This last amount which can be a shock to some vendors is the part that can cause the arguments. It is usually around $25.00 to the US, but I have had ones as high as $60.00 to $85.00 when a US bank is being used as an Intermediary bank to somewhere else (like an Asian or African country).