Find any bank's SWIFT/BIC Codefor your international transfer in seconds
Search by bank, country or city, instantly find and verify SWIFT/BIC Codes for banks worldwide.
How to read a
BIC/SWIFT Code
BANK CODE
4 letters · Shortened form of the bank's name
COUNTRY CODE
2 letters · ISO country code showing where the bank is registered
LOCATION CODE
2 characters · Letters or numbers indicating the bank's head office city
BRANCH CODE
3 characters · Specific branch. XXX always means the head office
Three steps to the
correct code
Country
- Uganda
- Ukraine
- United States of America
- United Arab Emirates
- United Kingdom
When do you need
a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes aren't needed for domestic transfers they're specifically for routing money across international banking networks. Here's when you'll be asked for one.

Send Money Internationally
When making an international bank transfer, you'll need the recipient bank's SWIFT Code to ensure your money reaches the right destination.

Receive Money From Abroad
If someone is sending money to your bank account from another country, they may ask for your bank's SWIFT/BIC code.

SEPA Payments
For transfers within the Eurozone, you'll often need a SWIFT/BIC code along with an IBAN to route payments accurately.
Everything you need
for accurate transfers
Instant Verification
Check whether a SWIFT/BIC code is valid before sending money.
Global Coverage
Search SWIFT codes from banks across 200+ countries and territories.
Easy Search
Find SWIFT codes by country, bank name, city, or branch.
One-Click Copy
Copy SWIFT codes instantly and paste them directly into your transfer.
Branch-Level Detail
Get detailed information including bank, branch, city, and location codes.
Built for International Payments
Designed for individuals and businesses making cross-border transfers.
Frequently asked
questions
A SWIFT code (also called a BIC or Bank Identifier Code) is an internationally recognized code (usually 8 or 11 digits) used to identify banks during international money transfers.
Your SWIFT code usually appears on your bank statement, inside your online banking portal, or on your bank's official website. If you can't find it there, our SWIFT Finder above is the fastest way to look it up by bank name and country.
Find SWIFTRouting numbers are used for domestic transfers within the United States. SWIFT codes are used for international transfers and work globally. If you're sending money from the US to another country, you'll need a SWIFT code for the recipient's bank, not a routing number.
Not always. Some banks use a single code (usually ending in XXX) to represent all branches through the head office. Others assign unique codes to individual branches which typically have different last three characters. If your recipient provides a branch-specific code, use it. If not, the head office code will generally work.