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Live Currency Converter

Real-time exchange rates for over 40 global currencies. Enter an amount and select currencies to see live-rate conversions.

Quick conversions from USD

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Rates provided by Open Exchange Rates. Refresh for latest. Not for financial transactions.

Free Live Currency Converter — USD to INR, EUR, CAD, JPY & 40+ Currencies

Get the real-time mid-market rate for every major currency pair — from USD to INR and USD to EUR to USD to PKR, USD to PHP, and beyond. No sign-up, no ads, no bank markups. Just the exact rate the global market is trading right now.

USD to INR — US Dollar to Indian Rupee (Live Rate Today)

The USD to INR conversion is the single most searched currency pair in the world by volume, driven by India's massive diaspora sending remittances home, a booming bilateral trade relationship, and one of the fastest-growing import/export economies on the planet. Whether you need to know 1 USD to INR today for a quick reference or are calculating a large bank transfer, the live rate above updates in real time.

The Indian Rupee (₹) is managed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) under a managed float regime, meaning the RBI intervenes to prevent excessive volatility. As a result, the USD to INR today rate tends to move more gradually than fully free-floating pairs — but it still shifts daily based on US Federal Reserve policy, India's trade deficit, and global oil prices (India is a major oil importer, and oil is priced in USD).

Quick reference: Select USD → INR in the converter above to see the exact live rate. The quick-conversion cards give you instant readouts for 1, 10, 100, and 1,000 USD to INR.

USD to EUR & USD to GBP — Converting to Euro and British Pound

The USD to EUR (US Dollar to Euro) pair — also written as USD to Euro — is the most traded currency pair in the entire forex market, accounting for roughly 24% of global daily forex volume. The Euro is the official currency of 20 EU member states and one of the world's two primary reserve currencies alongside the Dollar.

USD to EUR is heavily influenced by the interest rate differential between the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank (ECB). When the Fed raises rates faster than the ECB, the Dollar typically strengthens against the Euro — meaning fewer Euros per Dollar — and vice versa.

Similarly, USD to GBP (US Dollar to British Pound Sterling) is one of the oldest forex pairs in existence, often called "Cable" by traders — a nickname dating back to the transatlantic telegraph cable used to transmit rates in the 19th century. The Pound is one of the highest-valued major currencies in nominal terms, so converting USD to GBP typically yields a number less than 1 (e.g., $1 USD buys roughly £0.79).

USD to CAD & USD to AUD — North American & Pacific Dollar Pairs

USD to CAD (US Dollar to Canadian Dollar) is critically important for cross-border trade between the United States and Canada — the world's largest bilateral trading relationship. The Canadian Dollar is a "commodity currency," meaning it tends to strengthen when global oil prices rise (Canada is a major oil exporter). The pair is often called the "Loonie" by traders.

USD to AUD (US Dollar to Australian Dollar) is another commodity-linked pair. Australia's economy is heavily tied to iron ore, coal, and gold exports, primarily to China. When Chinese economic data is strong, AUD tends to appreciate against the USD. The Australian Dollar is also heavily influenced by Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) interest rate decisions.

USD to JPY (Yen) & USD to CNY / USD to RMB

USD to JPY — the US Dollar to Japanese Yen — is the second most traded currency pair globally. Japan's ultra-low interest rate policy (maintained for decades by the Bank of Japan) has made the Yen a popular "carry trade" currency, where investors borrow cheap Yen to invest in higher-yielding assets. When risk sentiment deteriorates globally, traders unwind carry trades and the Yen often strengthens sharply. Because the Yen trades at a high nominal value per Dollar (typically 130–160 JPY per USD), the USD to Yen rate is one where small moves represent meaningful value changes.

USD to CNY (also called USD to RMB) refers to converting US Dollars into Chinese Yuan Renminbi. The Yuan operates under a managed float controlled by the People's Bank of China (PBOC), which sets a daily "fix" and allows the rate to move within a narrow band around it. This means USD to RMB rates are heavily influenced by Chinese government policy and tend to be more stable than freely floating pairs. The offshore version of the Yuan (CNH) trades more freely in Hong Kong.

USD to PHP, IDR, VND & KRW — Southeast & East Asian Currencies

USD to PHP (US Dollar to Philippine Peso) is one of the highest-volume searches in this group, driven by the Philippines' enormous overseas worker (OFW) population sending remittances home. The Philippines receives over $30 billion in annual remittances — roughly 8–9% of its GDP — making the USD/PHP rate a matter of daily financial importance for millions of families.

USD to IDR (US Dollar to Indonesian Rupiah) reflects Southeast Asia's largest economy. The Rupiah trades at a very high nominal number per Dollar (typically 15,000–16,000 IDR per USD), making it one of the currencies where rounding matters most in conversions. Indonesia's rate is influenced by commodity exports (palm oil, coal, nickel) and capital flows.

USD to VND (Vietnamese Dong) is increasingly relevant as Vietnam has become a major global manufacturing hub, attracting supply chain investment from companies diversifying away from China. The State Bank of Vietnam manages the Dong within a trading band against the USD.

USD to KRW (US Dollar to South Korean Won) tracks the currency of Asia's fourth-largest economy. South Korea's export-driven economy — dominated by Samsung, Hyundai, and LG — means the Won is heavily sensitive to global trade volumes and US-China relations.

USD to MXN, USD to COP & USD to Peso — Latin American Rates

USD to MXN (US Dollar to Mexican Peso) is a high-importance pair for both travelers and businesses. Mexico is the United States' largest trading partner (by some measures), and the Peso has become increasingly sensitive to nearshoring investment flows as companies move manufacturing from Asia to Mexico. The Peso is a liquid, freely floating currency that also serves as a proxy trade for broader emerging-market sentiment.

USD to COP (US Dollar to Colombian Peso) and other Latin American peso conversions — including USD to peso searches that may refer to Argentine, Chilean, or Philippine pesos — all follow the general pattern of emerging market currencies: they tend to weaken when the US Dollar strengthens globally and strengthen when commodity prices rise.

Note that "USD to peso" is ambiguous — it could refer to the Mexican Peso (MXN), Colombian Peso (COP), Chilean Peso (CLP), Argentine Peso (ARS), or Philippine Peso (PHP). Our converter lets you select the exact currency you need.

USD to PKR — US Dollar to Pakistani Rupee

USD to PKR is one of the most-searched currency conversions in South Asia. Pakistan's economy has undergone significant currency volatility in recent years, with the Pakistani Rupee depreciating substantially against the Dollar as part of IMF-linked economic adjustment programs. The rate is closely watched by the Pakistani diaspora — particularly in the UK, UAE, and USA — who send billions of dollars in annual remittances.

Unlike the Indian Rupee, which moves more gradually, the PKR has at times experienced sharp devaluations. Checking the live USD to PKR rate before making a transfer can make a meaningful difference in the amount received.

How This Currency Converter Calculator Works

This tool fetches the latest mid-market exchange rates from the Fawaz Ahmed open exchange rates API, a free, daily-updated dataset sourced from the global interbank market. The mid-market rate is the exact midpoint between the buy (bid) and sell (ask) prices — it's the "true" exchange rate you see on Reuters or Bloomberg, without any bank markup applied.

All calculations happen instantly in your browser as you type. The tool supports over 40 currencies and automatically falls back to reliable estimated rates if the network request fails, so you always get an answer. If you find this useful for financial planning, you might also want our Hourly Paycheck Calculator or BMI Calculator.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 USD to INR today?

The live 1 USD to INR rate changes every second during market hours (forex trades 24 hours a day, five days a week). You can see the exact current rate by selecting USD → INR in the converter above — it fetches the live mid-market rate automatically when the page loads. As of early 2025, the rate has generally traded in the 83–85 INR per USD range, though this will have shifted by the time you read this.

Is the rate shown the same as what my bank gives me?

No. This tool shows the mid-market rate — the raw interbank rate with no markup. Banks, remittance services (Western Union, Wise, Remitly), and currency exchange booths all add a spread or fee on top of this rate. The difference between the mid-market rate and your bank's rate is how financial institutions make money on currency conversions. Always compare the mid-market rate shown here with the rate your service provider quotes to understand how much you're paying in hidden fees.

What is the difference between USD to RMB and USD to CNY?

They refer to the same currency. RMB stands for "Renminbi," which is the official name of China's currency system. CNY is the ISO 4217 currency code for the Chinese Yuan — the primary unit of the Renminbi. So USD to RMB and USD to CNY are the same conversion. There is also CNH (offshore Yuan, traded in Hong Kong), which trades at a slightly different rate due to fewer capital controls.

Why does "USD to peso" return different results on different sites?

Because "peso" is the name of multiple currencies across several countries. USD to MXN is the Mexican Peso, USD to COP is the Colombian Peso, USD to PHP is the Philippine Peso, USD to CLP is the Chilean Peso, and USD to ARS is the Argentine Peso — and each trades at a very different rate. Our converter lists each currency by its full name and country flag so there's no ambiguity.

How often do exchange rates update?

The rates in this converter are refreshed once daily from the open exchange rates dataset. The interbank forex market updates tick-by-tick, 24 hours a day on weekdays, but for most consumer use cases — travel budgeting, remittance planning, invoice calculation — a daily rate is more than sufficient. If you need tick-by-tick precision for forex trading, you should use a dedicated trading terminal.

Which currencies does this converter support?

Over 40 major world currencies, including: USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, CAD, AUD, CHF, CNY/RMB, INR, BRL, MXN, SGD, HKD, NOK, SEK, DKK, NZD, ZAR, TRY, KRW, IDR, MYR, THB, PHP, AED, SAR, EGP, PLN, CZK, HUF, ILS, CLP, COP, ARS, PKR, BDT, VND, NGN, KES, and RUB. All can be used as both the source and target currency.

Can I convert currencies other than USD as the base?

Yes. While most searches focus on USD conversions, the "From" dropdown supports all 40+ currencies as the base. You can calculate EUR to INR, GBP to AED, CAD to PHP, or any other cross-currency pair. The tool performs a two-step calculation through USD as the intermediary, which is how the global forex market prices cross rates.

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