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Currency

Currency Exchange Rates

Live mid-market rates for the world's most-used currencies.

Currency1 USD =in USD
EUR Euro0.86241.16
GBP British Pound0.74531.34
JPY Japanese Yen159.150.0063
CAD Canadian Dollar1.380.7246
AUD Australian Dollar1.40.7121
CHF Swiss Franc0.78651.27
CNY Chinese Yuan6.80.1472
INR Indian Rupee95.70.0104
AED UAE Dirham3.670.2723
SAR Saudi Riyal3.750.2667
EGP Egyptian Pound52.920.0189
TRY Turkish Lira45.720.0219
PKR Pakistani Rupee278.930.0036
NGN Nigerian Naira1,3700.0007
ZAR South African Rand16.470.0607
BRL Brazilian Real5.010.1996

Mid-market reference rates (European Central Bank & open.er-api), updated 2026-05-22 — for information only, not financial advice. The rate a bank or app gives you may differ.

Convert a specific amount

This table shows reference rates between popular currencies. To convert an exact amount — including crypto spot — use the currency converter.

What moves exchange rates

Floating currencies move constantly with interest-rate expectations, inflation, trade flows, and confidence in an economy. Some currencies — like the UAE dirham, Saudi riyal, and several other Gulf currencies — are pegged to the US dollar, so their rate barely changes. Others, such as the Egyptian pound or Turkish lira, float freely and can move sharply, which is exactly why a live rate matters.

Mid-market rate vs the rate you get

The rates here are mid-market — the fair midpoint, before anyone adds a margin. When you actually exchange money, banks and apps usually give a slightly worse rate and keep the difference. Treat this table as your benchmark: if a provider’s rate sits far from it, you are paying a hidden markup on top of any visible fee.

Frequently asked questions

What is the mid-market rate?+

The mid-market (interbank) rate is the midpoint between the buy and sell prices banks use with each other — the 'real' exchange rate before any markup. It is what we show here.

Why is my bank's rate different?+

Banks and apps usually add a margin on top of the mid-market rate, plus any visible fee. Comparing their rate to the one here shows your true cost.

How often do the rates update?+

Rates refresh roughly hourly from European Central Bank reference data and other public sources.

What makes exchange rates move?+

Interest-rate expectations, inflation, trade balances, political stability, and market sentiment all push currencies up and down. Pegged currencies (like several Gulf currencies tied to the US dollar) barely move, while free-floating ones can shift daily.

How do I read the table?+

Pick a base currency at the top. Each row then shows how much of that currency equals one unit of the listed currency, and how much one unit is worth back in your base — so you can read the rate in either direction.