Introduction
The first time I sent money home from the UK, I used my Barclays account. I typed in my mum’s account number in Lagos, hit confirm, watched £300 leave my account and then spent the next 20 minutes on the phone with my mum while she waited for it to arrive. Three days later, it did. And she’d received the equivalent of what felt like significantly less than I’d sent.
I didn’t understand what had happened. The fee had looked small. But nobody told me about the exchange rate markup and the invisible cut that banks quietly take before your money even begins its journey. That lesson cost me real naira.
If you’re regularly sending money home from the UK to Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe, India, the Philippines, Pakistan, wherever you are, this post is for you. I’ve tried most of these methods personally or know people who have. I’ll tell you what actually works, what sounds good but quietly drains your money, and how to stop leaving cash on the table every single month.
What to expect from this guide:
- Understand Where Your Money Actually Disappears
- The Best Methods
- Practical Tips That Save You Real Money
- My Honest System in 2026
First, Understand Where Your Money Actually Disappears
This is the thing nobody explains clearly enough. When you send money internationally, you’re not just paying a transfer fee. You’re also losing money in the exchange rate and this second cost is often bigger than the first.
The only number that matters is how many naira your recipient will get for the pounds you send. That’s it. Not the fee on the screen. Not how fast it arrives. Just: what lands in their account. Trustamai
UK banks generally add a 3% to 6% markup onto exchange rates. That sounds abstract until you do the maths. On a £500 monthly transfer to family in Nigeria, paying 5% extra in bank markup costs approximately £25 per month and £300 per year simply in unnecessary fees. That’s real money. That’s a flight home. That’s three months of your phone bill. Vanishing into thin air because you didn’t know there was a better way. NAIJASABINAIJASABI
Specialist international money transfer services are often cheaper because they use currency exchange rates closer to the market rate. And in 2026, those specialist services are genuinely excellent. You have no reason to keep using your bank for international transfers. Free Price Compare
The Best Methods, Ranked Honestly
1. Wise :— The Benchmark Everything Should Be Measured Against
I’ll put this plainly: if you’re not using Wise for at least some of your transfers home, you are overpaying. Full stop.
Wise uses the mid-market exchange rate which is the real exchange rate you see on Google with no markup added. All fees are shown upfront before you confirm the transfer. Fees start from 0.41% of the transfer amount, and 74% of transfers arrive in under 20 seconds with 95% arriving within a day. NAIJASABI
That “mid-market rate” thing matters more than anything else. When you Google “GBP to NGN” right now, the number you see that’s the mid-market rate. It’s the fair rate. Banks don’t give you that rate. They give you a worse one and pocket the difference silently. Wise gives you the real rate and charges you a small, transparent fee instead. You see it upfront. No surprises.
In 2026, with Nigeria’s inflation rate hovering around 28% and the official exchange rate sitting near ₦2,500 to £1, every single kobo counts. Using Wise consistently instead of your bank could make a meaningful difference to what your family actually receives over the course of a year. Trustamai
Best for: Regular transfers to a Nigerian bank account, anyone who values transparency, people who want the cheapest long-term option.
2. LemFi :— The One Nigerian Diaspora Discovered Before Everyone Else
If you’re in any Nigerian student or diaspora WhatsApp group in the UK, you’ve probably seen LemFi mentioned. There’s a reason for that.
LemFi is particularly popular among diaspora users sending money to countries like Nigeria, where it offers competitive rates and fast delivery. The core appeal is simple: zero flat fees and a multi-currency wallet. Instead of charging you upfront, LemFi includes a small margin in the exchange rate but for many corridors, particularly UK to Nigeria, the total cost still comes out extremely competitive. RemitbeeIdealRemit
Transfers are usually within minutes for supported banks and wallets, which matters a lot when your mum needs money today, not in three days. LemFi also lets you hold GBP, NGN, USD and other currencies in one app which is useful if you’re managing money across multiple accounts. RemitRate
The honest caveat: account suspension complaints appear consistently in user reviews, and its compliance process can temporarily freeze accounts without much transparency. This has happened to people I know — usually around large or unusual transfers. Don’t use it for anything time-critical without having a backup option ready. IdealRemit
My advice: Before every transfer, open LemFi’s app and Wise side by side. Run the same amount through both calculators. Whichever shows more naira arriving then use that one. The check takes 60 seconds and is absolutely worth doing.
Best for: Sending smaller, frequent amounts to Nigeria. Fast transfers where you know the recipient’s bank.
3. Remitly :— Good for Speed, Worth Watching on Rates
Remitly has a huge user base and it’s genuinely easy to use. Their Economy option is bank-funded, arrives in 1–5 days, and often comes with no fees. Their Express option is card-funded, arrives within minutes, but usually carries a fee of £2.99–£3.99. Yolla Calling
The thing to know about Remitly is the first-transfer offer. Like MoneyGram, Remitly offers a special introductory exchange rate for new customers, which applies to the first £250 of it. This is genuinely good if you haven’t used them before, you’ll get an excellent rate on that first transfer. But don’t let the good first experience make you complacent. You won’t be able to access the promotional rate for future transfers, and the regular rate includes a markup. Always compare before confirming. WiseWise
Best for: First-time senders (use that intro rate), people who need guaranteed speed with Express delivery.
4. WorldRemit :— Solid, Especially If Your Recipient Wants Cash or Mobile Money
WorldRemit has been around long enough to be trustworthy, and it covers more delivery options than most. It delivers to over 130 countries via mobile money, cash pickup, and bank deposit. Bank transfer fees typically run around £0.99–£3.99. SendMoneyCompareYolla Calling
For Nigeria specifically, WorldRemit works smoothly into major banks. If your family member doesn’t have easy access to a bank account but can collect cash, WorldRemit’s cash pickup network is useful though not as vast as Western Union’s.
Best for: Families who prefer cash pickup, or when sending to countries beyond Nigeria.
5. Western Union:— Only Use It When Nothing Else Works
Look, Western Union built its reputation over decades and the brand recognition is real. But in 2026, it’s hard to recommend it as a first choice for most transfers. For UK to Nigeria transfers via Western Union, you can only send USD to Nigeria, which adds an extra conversion step and usually means worse rates overall. BitDegree
That said, Western Union’s cash pickup network is unmatched globally. If your recipient lives somewhere remote, if there’s a banking access issue, or if you genuinely need someone to walk into a physical location and collect cash within the hour trust Western Union can do that when nobody else can.
Best for: Emergency cash pickup only. Not for regular transfers.
6. Your UK High Street Bank, Please Don’t
I know I led with a personal story about doing exactly this. I’m not judging. But now you know better.
High-street banks commonly add an exchange rate markup and international transfer fees, which can reduce the value of your transfer without being obvious. They do this through the SWIFT network which is slow, adds correspondent bank fees that can eat chunks mid-transfer, and the whole thing is opaque in a way that benefits nobody except the banks. Free Price Compare
Specialist money transfer services consistently deliver the same transfer at 0.5%–1.5% total cost, compared to 3%–6% at a bank. There is no scenario in which sending through Barclays or Lloyds is the cheapest option. Use your bank for everything else. Use a specialist for international transfers. NAIJASABI
Practical Tips That Save You Real Money
Always compare on the day. Exchange rates move daily and sometimes dramatically, especially for NGN. Sending mid-week can sometimes yield better rates than on weekends or public holidays. Check the rate on the day, not the rate you saw last Tuesday. Trustamai
Get the recipient details exactly right. Ensure you have the correct NUBAN account number and the recipient’s full name as it appears on their bank account. Their account must also be linked to their BVN and NIN to avoid delays or rejection by Nigerian banks. A wrong digit in a NUBAN number can bounce a transfer and add days to the process. Double-check. Triple-check. Trustamai
Don’t send on a panic. The worst transfers I’ve made were rushed ones, when someone needed money urgently and I just hit confirm without comparing rates. Keep Wise and LemFi both installed so you can do a 60-second comparison even under time pressure. Urgency is when bad decisions get made.
Watch the “zero fee” marketing. LemFi and some other platforms often advertise zero transfer fees and incorporate their costs within the exchange rate. “No fee” never truly means free it means the cost is hidden in the rate. Always look at how much naira actually arrives. That’s the only honest comparison. Remitbee
Use a dedicated transfer app, not your banking app’s international payment option. Even if your bank has an in-app international transfer feature, it almost certainly routes through SWIFT with a marked-up rate. Ignore it.
My Conclusion: My Honest System in 2026
For what it’s worth, this is what I actually do:
I have both Wise and LemFi installed. Before any transfer, I run the same amount through both and send with whichever gives more naira. Nine times out of ten it’s one of those two. For urgent transfers where the recipient needs money within minutes, LemFi usually wins on speed. For larger, less urgent amounts where I want the best rate and full transparency, Wise is my default.
I never use my high street bank for transfers anymore. I used WorldRemit once when sending to a family member in a different country and it worked fine. I tried Remitly when I first moved here, got that good first-transfer rate, and have used it occasionally since then but I always compare first.
The system doesn’t have to be complicated. Install two apps. Compare before you send. Send with whoever gives your family more money.
That’s genuinely it. Everything else is noise.

