Sending Money Home from the Middle East: Teacher Guide 2026

Best ways to send money home from the Middle East for teachers 2026. Wise vs bank transfers, exchange rate optimisation, GCC-specific payment methods, and how to avoid hidden fees.

Sending Money Home: Guide for Teachers Abroad

Transferring your savings from the Middle East to your home country efficiently is critical for maximising the financial benefit of international teaching. The difference between the cheapest and most expensive transfer methods can cost you hundreds or thousands of pounds per year in fees and unfavourable exchange rates. This guide covers the best methods, costs, and strategies for international money transfers.

Transfer Methods Compared

Method Fee Exchange Rate Speed Recommendation
Wise (TransferWise) 0.5-1.5% Mid-market rate 1-2 days Best overall
Revolut 0-1% Near-market rate Instant-1 day Excellent if supported
UAE Exchange / Al Ansari Fixed (AED 10-30) Slightly below market 1-3 days Good for large amounts
Bank wire transfer AED 50-100 1-3% below market 2-5 days Expensive β€” avoid for regular transfers
PayPal 2-4% Poor exchange rate Instant Avoid for large amounts

Primary transfers (savings): Use Wise for regular monthly transfers. Wise offers the mid-market exchange rate with transparent, low fees, and is widely used by the expatriate community. Set up a recurring transfer on payday to automate your savings discipline.

Daily spending (multi-currency): Hold a Revolut or similar multi-currency account for everyday transactions and small transfers. Useful for splitting currencies and managing expenses across multiple countries.

Large one-time transfers: For amounts above AED 50,000 (property deposits, investments), compare rates between Wise, UAE Exchange, and your bank. The percentage fee matters more on large amounts β€” even a 0.5% difference on AED 100,000 is AED 500.

Timing Your Transfers

Exchange rates fluctuate daily. For regular monthly transfers, the consistency of timing matters more than trying to predict rates. For large one-time transfers, set rate alerts on Wise or XE.com and execute when rates are favourable. The AED is pegged to the USD at a fixed rate (3.6725:1), so AED-to-USD transfers have no currency risk. AED-to-GBP and AED-to-EUR rates fluctuate with global FX markets.

UAE Banking Essentials

Open a UAE bank account within your first month β€” your salary will be paid into it. Major banks (Emirates NBD, ADCB, FAB, Mashreq) offer salary transfer accounts with no minimum balance requirements. Online banking is standard. Many teachers maintain both a UAE account (for salary and local expenses) and a home-country account (for savings and investments). See our financial planning guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I keep my savings in AED or convert?

Convert regularly to your home currency β€” unless you plan to stay in the GCC long-term or invest in AED/USD-denominated assets. Holding large AED balances while your financial commitments are in GBP or EUR creates currency risk. Regular monthly conversions (pound-cost averaging) smooth out exchange rate fluctuations and provide predictable savings in your home currency. If you are building towards a UK property purchase, regular GBP conversion ensures your deposit grows predictably regardless of FX movements.

About This Guide — This guide was prepared by the SabisCareers editorial team. Review status is shown above when available. See our Editorial Policy and Fact-Checking Process. Last updated: .

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Contributing writer at SabisCareers covering international teaching careers, salary guides, and school reviews across the Middle East.
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