Sending EUR to PKR: what you need to know.
The EUR → PKR corridor between Europe and Pakistan is competitive — most major providers serve it with reasonable rates. But the difference between the cheapest and the most expensive option in our comparison is often 2.5–3% of the transfer amount, which on a $1,000 transfer is the difference between PKR 298,038 and roughly PKR 290,470 arriving on the other side.
Typical fees on this corridor. Most major providers charge an upfront fee of €0–4 on small transfers, plus a hidden markup on the exchange rate of anywhere from 0.4% (Wise, Revolut) to 2.9% (Western Union). The hidden markup is what catches most senders out: a $0 fee sounds great until you realise the rate has been quietly moved against you. We always show the mid-market reference rate alongside each provider's offer so you can see exactly where the cost sits.
Common payout methods in Pakistan
Recipients in Pakistan can usually choose from a few different ways to collect their money. The right one depends on how quickly they need it and what they have access to:
- Bank deposit — supported by most major providers in this corridor.
- Easypaisa — supported by most major providers in this corridor.
For urgent cash pickup, Western Union's 550,000+ agent network is hard to beat — you'll pay a premium for it, but if your recipient needs cash in hand within minutes, that premium is worth comparing against the alternatives. For everything else, bank deposits and instant payment rails (UPI in India, PIX in Brazil, GCash in the Philippines) are typically faster, cheaper, and safer.
Best provider for EUR → PKR: Wise.
For straightforward EUR → PKR transfers, Wise is consistently the cheapest mainstream provider in our comparison. Wise (formerly TransferWise) is the gold standard for transparency in international transfers. It uses the real mid-market exchange rate and charges a small, visible fee instead of marking up the rate. Best for senders who want to know exactly what's being charged and value low total cost over speed gimmicks. On a €1,000 transfer at today's rate, that works out to PKR 298,038arriving in your recipient's account — roughly PKR 7,568 more than the most expensive option for the same starting amount.
Average savings vs banks. High-street banks typically apply a 3–5% markup on the exchange rate plus a flat international wire fee of $20–40. On a $1,000 transfer to Pakistan, that's often $50+ in hidden costs you don't see until your recipient's statement comes through. Even our most expensive listed provider beats most retail banks on this corridor.