
Multi-Currency Accounts for Business: Hold, Send, and Convert with Xe
October 14, 2025 — 5 min read
Table of Contents
Key takeaways
A multi-currency account lets your team hold, send, and convert in several currencies from one place, so you avoid back-and-forth conversions and pay partners in their currency.
Converting when it suits your cash flow helps you manage exposure to exchange rate moves, and you can also use forwards to lock a rate for future payments.
With Xe, you manage multi-currency balances, payments, and conversions in one platform with roles, real-time tracking, batch payouts, and API options, so finance gains control and visibility while reducing manual work.
Introduction
Paying suppliers and contractors in different countries is easier when you can hold and move money in their currency. A multi-currency account keeps those balances together, so you can convert when it suits you, settle faster with pre-funded funds, and track deliveries in one view. If exchange rates are moving, that flexibility can help protect margins and reduce surprises for your budget.
What is a multi-currency account?
A multi-currency account is a business account that supports multiple currencies at once. You can hold balances, convert between them, and pay out to your recipients without hopping across separate bank accounts. In practice, that means you can keep EUR for an upcoming invoice, pay a GBP supplier from your GBP balance, and convert only what you need, when you need it.
How Xe multi-currency accounts help finance teams
Capability | How it Helps |
|---|---|
Hold multiple currency balances | Keep funds in the currencies you spend, avoid back-and-forth conversions, pay partners locally. |
Pre-fund and pay from balances | Release payments quickly, reduce delays from funding gaps, keep operations moving. |
Convert when the timing is right | Choose when to exchange based on cash flow and budgets, which can soften the impact of short-term rate moves. |
Lock a future rate with forwards | Hedge known payables so budgets are more predictable. |
Track payments in real time | See sent, delivered, and received, which helps AP answer vendor questions and close the books. |
Schedule payments | Line up future-dated payments so they post on time without a last-minute rush. |
Pay multiple recipients | Run payroll or supplier batches efficiently with consistent references for reconciliation. |
Roles and approvals | Use maker-checker controls so the right people can create, view, or approve payments. |
No setup or monthly account fees | Focus on conversions and payment operations rather than account overheads. |
Multi-currency account vs. single-currency banking
The table outlines the practical differences you will notice once you switch. Use it as a checklist when you set up your process.
What a multi-currency account changes for AP, treasury, and reconciliation
Features vary by provider. Always confirm the specifics that matter to your team.
Area | Single-currency account | Multi-currency account |
|---|---|---|
Currency control | Convert on the fly, possible double conversions | Hold balances and convert only when needed |
Timing certainty | Pay as funds arrive, delays if funding is slow | Pre-fund and release payments on your schedule |
Vendor experience | Pay in your currency, vendor may face a conversion | Pay in vendor’s currency for cleaner settlement |
Reconciliation | External data in multiple systems | One view of balances, conversions, and payouts |
Risk management | Limited timing control | Choose when to convert, or lock a forward rate |
Operations | Separate accounts per currency | One account, roles and approvals in a single place |
Who benefits most
AP specialists: Pay suppliers in their currency, avoid surprise conversions, and close invoices faster.
CFOs and controllers: Decide when to convert based on cash flow and budgets. If conditions are choppy, use a forward to lock a future rate.
CTOs and product teams: Add payouts and reconciliation into your stack through an API, while finance keeps oversight with roles and approvals.
Importers, IT services, travel and hospitality: Hold the currencies you spend, pay partners locally, and protect contribution margins when exchange rates move.
FAQ
1. Do I need several bank accounts to hold different currencies?
No. You can hold, convert, and pay from multiple balances in a single Xe business account.
2. How does a multi-currency account help with FX risk?
You can time conversions to cash flow and market conditions, which can reduce the impact of short-term rate moves. For known future payments, a forward contract can lock a rate.
3. Can I automate pay runs?
Yes. You can schedule payments, pay multiple recipients in one run, and use roles for maker-checker approvals. If you prefer to build, you can integrate via API.
4. How quickly can I use the account? Once set up, you can begin holding balances and paying from those balances right away.
Conclusion
A multi-currency account gives you control over when you convert, how you pay, and how you reconcile. If you are ready to simplify cross-border payables, open a multi-currency account with Xe or speak with our team about your workflow.
The content within this blog post is for informational purposes only and is not intended to constitute financial, legal, immigration, or tax advice. All figures and data are based on publicly available sources at the time of writing and are subject to change. Actual conditions may vary depending on location, timing, and personal circumstances. We recommend consulting official government resources or a licensed professional for the most up-to-date and personalized guidance.
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