🇨🇭 CHF🇮🇳 INR

Send Money from Switzerland to India — Best CHF/INR Rates

Compare 4 providers · Live · Mid-market rate: 1 CHF = 121.66 INR

Live converter

1,21,660

Mid-market rate · the headline rate, not what providers actually give you

All Providers

Live
ProviderFeeRateRecipient getsSpeed
1
WiseBest value
CHF 5.36121.661,21,008
Within hours
Send
Free119.131,19,126
Minutes
Send
CHF 5.00119.371,18,769
1–3 days
Send
CHF 22.00116.661,14,092
1–3 days
Send

Save 6,916 by choosing the top-ranked provider over the lowest. That's the difference rate margin makes.

Sending money from Switzerland to India: what you need to know

Switzerland has the highest share of foreign-born residents in Europe — 25% of the population. Major communities include 320,000 Italians, 300,000 Germans, 270,000 Portuguese, plus growing Indian, Sri Lankan and Eritrean populations who remit regularly.

India is one of the world's largest remittance recipients — annual inflows are 120 billion (2023). The CHF → INR corridor is one of the most-served and most-competitive routes, which is why you'll often see fees as low as CHF0 from money transfer operators.

How recipients in India receive funds

Your recipient in India can receive INR in several ways. The fastest method depends on whether they have a bank account, a mobile wallet, or need cash:

  • UPI / IMPS — Instant 24/7 transfers to any UPI-linked bank account. Most popular for fast delivery.
  • NEFT / RTGS — Bank-to-bank transfers. NEFT processes in 30-minute batches; RTGS is for large amounts above ₹2 lakh.
  • Bank Account Deposit — Standard SWIFT-based wire transfer to any Indian bank. Typically 1–3 days.
  • Cash Pickup — Available through Western Union, MoneyGram, and local agents at thousands of locations across India.

Confirm the delivery method with your recipient before you send. Most providers let you choose the method during checkout, but the fee and speed can vary — bank transfers are typically cheapest, cash pickup is typically fastest.

Which CHF → INR provider is best for you?

There is no single 'best' provider — the right choice depends on whether you prioritise the recipient amount, the fee, the speed, or the institution type.

  • If you want the most for your money: Wise delivered the highest recipient amount in our most recent live snapshot.
  • If you want zero fees: Western Union charges no upfront fee — just check the exchange rate margin in the table to see what you actually receive.
  • If you'd rather use a bank: Raiffeisen Schweiz is one of the licensed bank options in this corridor — slower (typically 1–3 days) and usually more expensive than money-transfer operators, but some senders prefer the familiarity.

Recommendations refresh with the live data above. The provider that wins today may not win tomorrow — always check the live table immediately before sending.

Compliance and reporting rules in Switzerland

Sending money out of Switzerland is generally not taxed for the sender, but there are reporting and compliance rules worth knowing — especially for larger amounts. The most relevant rules:

  • FINMA Supervision — All financial intermediaries in Switzerland must be authorised by FINMA (Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority) and are subject to the Federal Act on Combating Money Laundering (AMLA).
  • 10,000 CHF Identification Threshold — Cash transfers over CHF 10,000 require full identity verification of the sender and beneficiary. The threshold for non-cash money transfer is CHF 1,000.
  • SIC vs SWIFT — Domestic CHF payments run on the SIC (Swiss Interbank Clearing) network. Outbound foreign-currency payments run on SWIFT, which adds 1–3 working days plus correspondent bank fees unless the provider absorbs them.

For a complete view of the rules that apply to senders in Switzerland, see our Switzerland guide. For your specific situation, consult a tax professional.

Receiving foreign currency in India

India's rules around inbound foreign currency are usually permissive for personal remittance, but it's worth knowing the framework:

  • FEMA — India's Foreign Exchange Management Act governs inbound remittances. There is no limit on receiving foreign money for personal use.
  • RBI Guidelines — The Reserve Bank of India oversees all inbound foreign currency transfers. Banks must convert foreign currency to INR at prevailing exchange rates.
  • TCS on Remittances — Tax Collected at Source (TCS) of 5–20% applies to outbound transfers from India under LRS. This does not affect inbound remittances to India.

The hidden cost: rate margin vs upfront fee

The single biggest mistake in international transfers is comparing fees instead of comparing the recipient amount. Many providers advertise "no fee" but build a 2–4% margin into the exchange rate they offer you. On a CHF1,000 transfer, a 3% rate margin costs you CHF30 of value — invisible unless you check the rate against the mid-market.

The mid-market rate right now is approximately 1 CHF = 121.66 INR. That's the rate banks use among themselves — providers add a margin on top, which is why the table above ranks by recipient amount rather than by headline fee.

When comparing options, always look at the "Recipient gets" column in the table above. That number already includes both the upfront fee and any rate margin — it's the only honest measure of cost.

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