This Article was fact checked and last updated for accuracy on November 3, 2025 by Mani Karthik
The week before I moved back to India in 2017, I had a problem.
Multiple bank accounts. In the US. Needed to keep them active for a while.
Credit cards. Investment accounts. Monthly subscriptions. All needed US payment methods.
My American bank said they’d close my account if I moved abroad.
Lovely.
I asked my colleagues at HappyFox in the Bay Area what to do.
Someone mentioned Wise. Another person talked about Revolut.
Both promised to work across countries. No matter where you lived.
Sounded too good to be true.
Opened accounts on both. Seven years later, I still use both.
For different reasons.
What Actually Are These Services
Wise started as TransferWise in 2011. British company. Focused on cheap international transfers.
Revolut launched in 2015. Also British. Started as a travel card. Grew into a digital bank.
Both offer multi currency accounts. Both have debit cards. Both work globally.
That’s where similarities end.
| Aspect | Wise | Revolut |
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 2011 | 2015 |
| Primary Focus | Money transfers | Digital banking |
| Banking License | Limited (in some countries) | Full banking license (UK, EU) |
| Core Philosophy | Transparency in forex | All in one money app |
Wise is like a specialist doctor. Does one thing brilliantly. Currency exchange and transfers.
Revolut is like a general practitioner. Does many things. Some better than others.
When I was managing finances across countries, both helped differently.
My First Experience With Each
Got my Wise card delivered to my California address in June 2017.
Activated it. Added money. Used it at Safeway. Worked perfectly.
The app showed me exactly what I paid. No hidden fees. Transparent conversion.
Revolut card arrived a week later.
Sleeker card. Metal option available. Felt premium.
Used it at the same Safeway. Also worked fine.
But the app was busier. Crypto. Stocks. Insurance. Budgeting tools.
Too much happening. Overwhelming initially.
What this really means is: Wise keeps it simple. Revolut wants to be your everything app.
Neither approach is wrong. Depends what you need.
My wife loved Wise immediately. Clean. Simple. Clear pricing.
My US born son preferred Revolut. Cool card. Fun features. Social payments.
The Currency Exchange Reality
This is where the real differences emerge.
Wise uses mid market rate. The actual exchange rate. Zero markup.
They charge a small transparent fee. Usually 0.35% to 0.65% depending on currency.
Revolut gives you mid market rate too. But with conditions.
Free up to a certain limit monthly. After that, they add a markup.
| Currency Exchange | Wise | Revolut |
|---|---|---|
| Exchange Rate | Mid market | Mid market (conditions apply) |
| Free Limit | None (always small fee) | £1,000/month free then 0.5% markup |
| Weekend Rates | Same | 1% markup on weekends |
| Transparency | Crystal clear | Requires reading fine print |
Sent $5,000 from my US account to India in August 2024.
Through Wise: Got ₹4,19,250. Fee was $18.75. Rate was ₹83.85 per dollar.
Through Revolut: Got ₹4,18,500. No fee shown but rate was ₹83.70 per dollar.
Difference? ₹750 less with Revolut.
Not huge. But this was within their free limit. Beyond the limit, the gap widens.
When I’m transferring large amounts, Wise saves more money consistently.
Quick Recap:
✅ Wise better for large transfers
✅ Revolut fine for small amounts within limits
✅ Wise more transparent always
✅ Revolut markup hidden in rate after limits
My accountant friend from SuperMoney days taught me this.
Always calculate the effective rate after all fees. The number that matters is what lands in your account.
Not what the marketing says.
The Multi Currency Feature
Both let you hold multiple currencies in one account.
Wise supports 50+ currencies. Real account details for 10+ currencies.
Revolut supports 30+ currencies. Virtual accounts for most.
Think of it like this:
Wise gives you actual bank account details. USD account has routing number and account number. GBP account has sort code. EUR has IBAN.
Real accounts. You can receive salary. Get paid by clients. Everything.
Revolut gives you account details too. But they’re more limited.
| Multi Currency | Wise | Revolut |
|---|---|---|
| Currencies Held | 50+ | 30+ |
| Real Account Details | 10+ currencies | Limited currencies |
| USD Account | Full routing details | Yes but limited |
| EUR Account | IBAN provided | IBAN provided |
| Receiving Money | Fully supported | Some restrictions |
I kept my Wise USD account active after moving to India.
Still receive occasional consulting payments there. Works perfectly.
My old clients in the US pay me like I still live there. Money shows up in my Wise USD balance.
Convert to INR when rates are good. Transfer to my Indian bank.
Tried doing this with Revolut. More complicated. More restrictions.
When managing US income after returning to India, Wise made life simpler.
💡Tip: If you’re still earning in USD after moving back, get a Wise USD account before leaving the US. Acts as a bridge account.
The Hidden Fees Nobody Explains
Wise is upfront about everything.
Show you the fee before transfer. Show you the rate. Show you what recipient gets.
No surprises. Ever.
Revolut hides things in fine print.
Free transfers up to £1,000 monthly on standard plan. After that, 0.5% fee kicks in.
Weekend transfers? 1% markup automatically added. Many people miss this.
Stock trading? Seems free. Actually has spread costs.
Crypto? Spread is sometimes 1.5%. Not shown upfront.
I got hit by the weekend markup once. Transferred money on Sunday. Lost ₹840 to markup I didn’t expect.
Called support. They said it’s in the terms. Read page 47 of the user agreement.
Who reads page 47?
Wise has never surprised me with hidden costs. Not once in seven years.
When you’re converting USD to INR, transparency matters more than marketing.
Feature Overload vs Simplicity
Revolut wants to be everything.
Banking. Investing. Crypto. Insurance. Travel booking. Phone plans. Gift cards.
The app has 20+ sections. Overwhelming.
My dad would have hated it. Too much happening.
Wise does fewer things. Does them better.
Money transfer. Currency exchange. Multi currency account. Debit card.
That’s it. Simple. Focused.
| Features | Wise | Revolut |
|---|---|---|
| Core Service | Money transfer | Digital bank |
| Stock Trading | No | Yes |
| Crypto | No | Yes |
| Budgeting Tools | Basic | Advanced |
| Insurance Products | No | Yes |
| Subscription Management | No | Yes |
| App Complexity | Simple | Complex |
My wife still uses Wise exclusively. Clean interface. Does what she needs.
My son uses Revolut. He trades stocks. Buys crypto. Likes the all in one approach.
Different personalities. Different tools.
I use both. Wise for serious money management. Revolut for experimenting with features.
“Why do you need two apps?” my wife asks regularly. “Because I like options,” I reply. She rolls her eyes.
This is similar to how I use multiple trading platforms. Right tool for the right job.
The Card Experience
Wise card is plain. Blue plastic. Nothing fancy.
Works everywhere. Mastercard. Accepted globally.
Used it in 15 countries. Never failed once.
The app shows transactions instantly. Exchange rate used. Fees charged. Everything clear.
Revolut card looks better. Sleek design. Metal options available.
Standard card is free. Premium and Metal cards cost extra. ₹499 to ₹1,499 monthly.
The metal card feels premium. Nice to show off.
Does it work better? No. Just looks better.
Functionality wise, both cards are excellent.
Contactless. Chip and pin. Apple Pay. Google Pay. All supported.
But here’s something important.
Wise card ATM withdrawals are free up to £200 monthly. Then 2% fee.
Revolut free withdrawals depend on plan. Standard gives £200 free monthly. Premium gives £400. Metal gives £800.
When traveling, these limits matter.
I withdrew cash in Singapore once. Used Wise card. Crossed my limit. Paid 2% fee.
Used Revolut Premium card next time. No fee because higher limit.
The right card depends on usage pattern.
When traveling frequently, these details add up.
Customer Support Reality
Wise support is good. Chat based. Usually respond within hours.
Had an issue with a stuck transfer once. Contacted support. Response in 3 hours. Issue resolved next day.
They actually helped. Not just copy paste responses.
Revolut support is hit or miss.
Standard account? Chat support only. Long wait times. Sometimes 24+ hours for response.
Premium account? Phone support available. Better response times.
I have Premium. Support is decent. Not amazing. Decent.
My friend has standard Revolut. His experience is worse. Support tickets taking days.
The difference matters when money is stuck.
Raised a transfer issue with Wise once. They proactively updated me every few hours. Professional.
Raised a card issue with Revolut. Generic responses. Took 3 days to resolve.
Not terrible. But not great either.
When choosing financial platforms, support quality matters more than features.
The Subscription Cost Factor
Wise is free. No monthly fee. Ever.
Pay only when you transfer money. Otherwise zero cost.
Revolut has tiers. Standard is free. Premium costs £6.99 monthly. Metal costs £12.99 monthly.
| Plan Features | Wise | Revolut Standard | Revolut Premium | Revolut Metal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly Cost | ₹0 | ₹0 | ₹699 | ₹1,299 |
| Free Transfers | Small fee always | £1,000/month | £5,000/month | Unlimited |
| ATM Withdrawals | £200 free | £200 free | £400 free | £800 free |
| Card Type | Standard plastic | Standard plastic | Premium plastic | Metal card |
| Support | Chat (good) | Chat (slow) | Priority chat + phone | Priority everything |
Numbers converted at ₹100 per GBP approximately.
Is Premium or Metal worth it?
Depends on usage.
If you transfer over £5,000 monthly, Premium saves money on fees.
If you like premium support and higher ATM limits, Premium makes sense.
If you want a metal card and status, Metal is for you.
I pay for Revolut Premium. ₹699 monthly. Worth it for higher limits and better support.
But Wise remains my primary service. Because it’s free and works perfectly.
My wife thinks paying for Revolut is waste. She’s probably right.
But I like having options.
Here’s the catch: Free doesn’t mean cheaper if hidden markups cost more. Paid doesn’t mean better if you don’t use features.
The Tax Reporting Angle
This matters for returning Indians.
Wise provides clean statements. Transaction history. Easy to download.
Sent these to my CA. He was happy. Clear. Simple. Easy to file.
Revolut statements are messier.
Too many transactions. Stocks. Crypto. Currency conversions. Everything mixed.
Had to manually separate things for my CA. Extra work. Extra CA fees.
When filing ITR after returning, clean records save time and money.
Wise also provides year end summaries. Total money transferred. Total fees paid. Everything organized.
Revolut does too. But buried in the app. Harder to find.
Small difference. But matters during tax season.
My CA charges ₹5,000 extra if I give him messy statements. Wise saves me that annually.
The Moving Back to India Story
When I decided to return in 2017, banking was a concern.
Kept my US accounts initially. Closed some. Kept others.
Wise became my bridge.
USD account with Wise received my final paychecks. 401k partial withdrawals. Everything.
Converted to INR when rates were favorable. Sent to my Indian accounts.
Saved approximately ₹45,000 over 6 months compared to direct bank wires.
Revolut I used differently. Travel card mainly.
Visited US twice in 2018. Used Revolut card. No forex markups. Worked beautifully.
But for serious money management? Wise was the backbone.
My entire relocation strategy involved keeping Wise active as my international account.
Still using it the same way today.
The Crypto and Investment Features
Revolut offers stocks. Crypto. Commodities. All in app.
Sounds convenient. Actually is convenient for casual investing.
Bought some Bitcoin through Revolut in 2019. Small amount. ₹10,000. Experiment.
Interface was simple. Transaction smooth.
But the spreads. The hidden costs. They add up.
My friend who trades seriously says Revolut crypto spreads are 1% to 2%. Too high for frequent trading.
Wise doesn’t offer any of this. Intentionally.
They stick to what they do best. Currency and transfers.
I appreciate focused companies. They usually do better work.
When I want to invest in crypto properly, I use dedicated platforms.
Revolut crypto is fine for dabbling. Not for serious investing.
Same with stocks. Fun to try. Not optimal for serious portfolios.
Think of Revolut like a Swiss Army knife. Does many things adequately.
Wise is a chef’s knife. Does one thing perfectly.
Which you need depends on the cooking you’re doing.
Real World Usage Patterns
Here’s exactly how I use both today.
Wise for receiving USD payments. Converting to INR. Transferring to Indian banks.
Also use Wise for sending money to relatives abroad. UK. Canada. Australia.
Zero markup transfers. Best rates. Always.
Revolut I keep for travel. European trips. US visits.
Load money. Use card abroad. No forex fees within limits.
Also use it for trying new features. Stock trading practice. Small crypto buys.
| Usage Type | My Choice | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Receiving foreign income | Wise | Real USD account details |
| Large transfers to India | Wise | Best rates, transparent fees |
| Travel abroad | Revolut Premium | Higher ATM limits, no markup |
| Currency speculation | Revolut | Quick conversions within limits |
| Serious money management | Wise | Trust, transparency, track record |
My wife only uses Wise. Simpler life. Fewer apps. Same results.
My younger son wants Revolut. Cool factor. Social features. Metal card appeal.
I balance both. Works for me.
When helping people in the BackToIndia community, I recommend starting with Wise.
Add Revolut later if needed. Not the other way around.
Which One Should You Actually Get
Get Wise if: You need real multi currency accounts You transfer money internationally regularly You value transparency above everything You want the best exchange rates consistently You prefer simplicity over features
Get Revolut if: You travel frequently and want perks You like all in one money apps You want to try investing through one app You value premium card status You don’t mind subscription fees for features
Get both if: You’re optimizing international money management You want backup options for travel You handle multiple currencies regularly You like having choices based on situation
I have both. ₹699 monthly for Revolut Premium. ₹0 for Wise.
Total cost ₹699 monthly. Worth it for my usage.
Your situation might not need both. Start with Wise. Add Revolut if gaps exist.
My Honest Bottom Line
Wise is better for most returning NRIs.
Better rates. Real accounts. Simple interface. Zero surprises.
Revolut is better for frequent international travelers who want extras.
Premium features. Metal card. Perks. Status.
Both are legitimate. Both are safe. Both work globally.
But if I could only keep one? Wise. Without hesitation.
Saved me thousands over seven years. Never let me down. Does exactly what it promises.
Revolut is my secondary tool. Nice to have. Not essential.
Your mileage will vary based on needs.
But for managing money across borders, Wise is my recommendation.
Questions about your specific situation? Ask in BackToIndia Groups.
Real people. Real experiences. Real advice.
Sources and References
All data and rates verified as of November 2025 from:
Wise official pricing and features: www.wise.com
Revolut plans and pricing: www.revolut.com
FCA regulation database UK: www.fca.org.uk
Exchange rate comparisons: www.xe.com
Consumer reviews aggregated from Trustpilot: www.trustpilot.com
Exchange rates fluctuate constantly. Always check current rates before transferring. The comparisons in this article are based on actual usage over 7 years and rate checks in November 2025.
For related comparisons, check my detailed analysis of Wise Review and other money transfer services.
TLDR Version
Wise: Best for: International transfers, multi currency accounts, transparency Core strength: Best exchange rates with zero markup Monthly cost: ₹0 always Currencies: 50+ with real account details for 10+ My verdict: Essential for anyone managing money across countries
Revolut: Best for: All in one banking, travel perks, casual investing Core strength: Multiple features in one app Monthly cost: ₹0 to ₹1,299 depending on plan Currencies: 30+ with some restrictions My verdict: Nice to have, not essential
Head to head on $5,000 transfer to India: Wise delivered: ₹4,19,250 (transparent ₹18.75 fee) Revolut delivered: ₹4,18,500 (hidden markup in rate) Difference: ₹750 more with Wise
What I actually use: Primary: Wise for all serious transfers and multi currency needs Secondary: Revolut Premium for travel and experimenting Cost: ₹699/month for Revolut Premium, ₹0 for Wise Saved: Approximately ₹45,000 in first 6 months after moving back
For returning NRIs specifically: Start with Wise for real USD/GBP/EUR accounts Keep it active after moving to India Use for receiving foreign income Best rates for converting to INR Add Revolut only if you travel frequently
Reality check: Wise does one thing perfectly. Revolut does many things adequately. For managing money across countries, perfect beats adequate. Every time.
My recommendation: Get Wise today. Open multi currency account. Keep it forever. Add Revolut later only if specific needs arise. Most people won’t need both. I do because I optimize everything. You probably don’t need to.
Specific questions? Real humans with real experience in BackToIndia Groups. Join us.