1. Main features of a SEPA transfer
• Currency: euro (EUR) only
• Available in: EU countries and additionally Norway, Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein
• Works like a domestic transfer – no additional fees for a “foreign transfer” as long as it meets SEPA requirements
2. Conditions that must be met for a SEPA transfer:
• Currency: euro (EUR) only.
• Sender and recipient account: in SEPA countries
• Account number: IBAN
• BIC/SWIFT code: sometimes required
• Cost: SHA option (everyone pays their bank’s commission)
• No additional special instructions (e.g. OUR, BEN).
3. Processing time:
• Standard: 1–3 business days
• Usually: 1 business day, sometimes even the same day
Example:
Transfer of 500 EUR from Germany to Poland (EUR account).
• Fast and cheap (cheaper than SWIFT)
• No additional foreign fees
• Important: only EUR → EUR. If the sender selects PLN, a double currency conversion occurs (EUR → PLN → EUR), which means a loss of money and the need to pay an additional fee.
Some banks block SEPA from the start, especially for new accounts. Reasons:
• Security – you need to add the recipient as trusted, confirm via SMS or application.
• No activation – in some banks, international SEPA is disabled by default.
Examples of banks:
• BNP Paribas – requires recipient activation, possible SEPA blocking to Poland
• Crédit Agricole – daily limit, recipient activation
• Société Générale – confirmation of a new recipient with an SMS code
• La Banque Postale – default blocking of foreign transfers
• Hello Bank – blocking of first transfers, contacting support
What to do:
• Add a recipient in online banking (IBAN starting with “PL”)
• In case of a blockage – call the customer service and activate foreign SEPA.
• Send a test transfer of 1 EUR
• Enable the foreign transfers option in your account settings
Alternative: online banks and fintechs (Revolut, Wise, N26, Monese) – no SEPA restrictions
How does this happen?
• The bank’s interface suggests PLN (because the IBAN starts with “PL”)
• Customer approves PLN instead of EUR
• The sender’s bank converts the currency EUR → PLN, and the recipient’s bank converts it back PLN → EUR.
The result: double currency conversion and loss of up to several percent of the transfer.
Examples:
• BNP Paribas France – the customer sent 1000 EUR, the recipient received 915 EUR
• Crédit Agricole France – the system suggested PLN for an account in Poland
• La Banque Postale – no possibility to send EUR to Poland, forced PLN
How to avoid making this mistake:
• Always choose EUR as your transfer currency
• Check if the recipient’s account in Poland is held in EUR
• Enter the recipient as trusted and save the default currency as EUR
• Be careful when selecting the country – do not let the system change the currency to PLN
• Transfer type: SEPA
• Currency: EUR
• Account number: IBAN (starting with PL)
• Do not choose: SWIFT, PLN transfers or the OUR/BEN option
If you have any doubts, confirm with your bank that the transfer will be made as SEPA and in euro.