Send money from India to Denmark (INR→DKK)
The real INR/DKK mid-market rate, what a typical bank's hidden margin costs you, and the cheapest way to move money on this route.
Data signals
The real rate vs the hidden cost
Today's real rate
The mid-market rate is 1 INR = 0.0829 DKK.
Send 1,000 INR
At the real rate, 1,000 INR should arrive as about 83 DKK in Denmark.
The hidden cost
A typical bank or legacy app bakes in a ~4% exchange-rate margin — on this transfer that's roughly 3 DKK less than the mid-market rate, before any flat fee.
Worked example
Sending 1,000 INR
At the real (mid-market) rate
83 DKK
Via a typical bank (~4% margin)
80 DKK
You lose to the spread
3 DKK
before flat fees
Illustrative: the ~4% margin is a typical legacy-bank exchange-rate markup, not a quote. Mid-market rate as of 2026-05-28.
How the margin scales
What a ~4% margin costs as you send more
| You send | Real rate (mid-market) | Typical bank | You lose |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1,000 INR | 83 DKK | 80 DKK | −3 DKK |
| 5,000 INR | 414 DKK | 397 DKK | −17 DKK |
| 10,000 INR | 829 DKK | 796 DKK | −33 DKK |
Step by step
How to send money to Denmark cheaply
- Check the live INR/DKK mid-market rate (the one shown above) so you know the fair benchmark.
- Compare what actually arrives in DKK across providers — not the advertised fee. A specialist using the mid-market rate usually beats a bank's hidden margin.
- Confirm the recipient details and any local receiving fees in Denmark, then send; transfers on this route typically settle within 1–2 business days.
Move INR → DKK at the real rate
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FAQ
- What's the cheapest way to send money from India to Denmark?
- Providers that use the mid-market INR/DKK rate with a transparent flat fee (e.g. Wise) almost always beat a bank, which hides its margin in a worse exchange rate. Always compare the amount that actually lands in DKK, not the advertised "no fee".
- What is the mid-market rate?
- The mid-market (interbank) rate is the real midpoint between buy and sell prices for INR/DKK — the rate you see on Google. It carries no margin; the markup is what most banks add on top.
- Why does the amount received differ between providers?
- Two levers: the exchange rate margin (a hidden % on top of mid-market) and explicit fees. A 3–5% rate margin on a large transfer usually costs far more than a visible flat fee.