Sending Money to Malaysia Before You Arrive: Wise, Western Union and More
Quick Answer: Before your Malaysian bank account is open, the best way to access money is a multi-currency account such as Wise, which lets you hold and convert ringgit at near-mid-market rates and spend via card. For one-off transfers, Wise and Western Union both work; Wise typically offers better value than bank wires or cash-transfer services. Set this up before you fly so you land with accessible funds.
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The pre-arrival money gap
There’s an awkward window every new teacher faces: you’ve arrived (or are about to), but your Malaysian bank account and first salary are still weeks away. You need accessible funds for your deposit, first month’s rent, furniture, and daily life. Relying solely on your home debit or credit card works but racks up foreign-transaction and ATM fees. Planning ahead for this gap — ideally before you fly — saves both money and stress, and means you arrive financially on your feet.
Multi-currency accounts (Wise)
The single most useful tool for the pre-arrival period is a multi-currency account, with Wise (formerly TransferWise) the standout choice. You can open one online before you move, hold balances in multiple currencies including Malaysian ringgit, convert at close to the real mid-market exchange rate, and spend with a linked debit card or withdraw from ATMs. This effectively gives you a way to access ringgit before you have a local bank account, at far better rates than your home bank’s card. Revolut and similar services offer comparable functionality depending on your home country.
One-off transfers: Wise vs Western Union vs banks
If you need to send a lump sum — say, to pay a deposit — you have options, and they vary a lot in cost.
| Method | Best for | Typical cost |
|---|---|---|
| Wise | Best value transfers | Low fee, mid-market rate |
| Western Union | Cash pickup, speed | Higher fees/margins |
| Bank wire (SWIFT) | Large sums, familiarity | High fees + poor rates |
| Revolut/others | Home-country dependent | Varies |
For most teachers, Wise offers the best combination of low fees and fair exchange rates. Western Union is useful when speed or cash pickup matters. Traditional bank wires are usually the most expensive option once hidden exchange-rate margins are counted.
Watching out for hidden fees
The headline ‘fee’ is rarely the whole story. The biggest hidden cost in international transfers is the exchange-rate markup — the gap between the real mid-market rate and the rate you’re offered. Traditional banks and some cash-transfer services bury a margin here, so a ‘low fee’ transfer can still cost you dearly. Wise’s selling point is transparency: it shows the mid-market rate and a clear, separate fee. When comparing options, always look at how many ringgit actually land, not just the advertised fee. This is general information, not financial advice.
A practical pre-departure money plan
Here’s a sensible sequence. Before you fly: open a Wise (or equivalent) account, verify it, and load some funds, converting a buffer into ringgit. Bring a modest amount of cash for the very first days (taxis, food). On arrival, use your Wise card for spending and ATM withdrawals while your local account is set up. Once your Malaysian salary account is open, transfer ongoing funds as needed via Wise for the best rates. This staged approach means you’re never caught short during the transition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the cheapest way to get money to Malaysia?
For most people, a Wise account offers the best value, with low fees and near mid-market exchange rates, whether you’re holding ringgit on a card or sending a one-off transfer. Always compare how many ringgit actually arrive, not just the headline fee.
Can I access ringgit before opening a Malaysian bank account?
Yes. A multi-currency account like Wise lets you hold and spend ringgit via a debit card and withdraw from ATMs before your local account exists, bridging the pre-arrival gap neatly.
Should I bring cash when I arrive?
Bring a modest amount for the first few days — taxis, food, small purchases — since cash is essential for hawker stalls and markets. Don’t carry large sums; use a Wise card and ATMs for the rest.
Bottom Line
The smartest financial move you can make before relocating is to set up a multi-currency account like Wise while you’re still at home. It bridges the awkward gap before your Malaysian salary account exists, gives you ringgit at honest exchange rates, and saves you a small fortune in the hidden fees that bank wires and cash services quietly charge. Bring a little cash for your first days, lean on Wise for the transition, and switch to your local account once your salary starts flowing. This is general guidance, not financial advice — compare current options for your situation.
Similar Topics
| Opening a bank account step-by-step |
| Best Malaysian banks compared |
| Currency, cash vs card daily guide |
| First 30 days checklist |
References
Wise – wise.com
Bank Negara Malaysia – bnm.gov.my
Expat.com Malaysia money-transfer guides