Currency Converter
Convert between BDT, INR, USD, EUR and 30+ currencies.
Quick guide
Quick pairs
How Exchange Rates Work
Exchange rates tell you how much one currency is worth relative to another. They are affected by global demand, inflation, interest rates, trade balances, and market expectations.
This converter is built for quick estimates, travel planning, and basic comparisons. It should not be treated as a live bank quote or a locked remittance rate.
When To Use It
- Estimate travel spending before you exchange cash
- Compare rough costs across INR, BDT, USD, EUR, GBP, or JPY
- Check whether a transfer amount feels reasonable before opening a bank or wallet app
- Use the result as a starting point, then confirm the final quote with the provider
Rate Disclaimer
The converter uses approximate rates for convenience. If you are sending money, receiving a card settlement, or doing a business transaction, always compare the final quote from your bank, wallet, or exchange provider before you act.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate are these exchange rates?
The rates are approximate and meant for quick reference. Real transaction rates can differ because of spreads, fees, timing, and the provider you use.
Why do exchange rates change?
Exchange rates move because of interest rates, inflation, trade flows, central-bank decisions, market sentiment, and geopolitical events. Some pairs move many times in a single day.
What is the difference between buying and selling rates?
Buy and sell rates are usually different because providers add a spread. The spread helps cover their costs and is one reason a bank quote can differ from a mid-market reference rate.
Quick answer
Currency Converter is built for people who want a fast, browser-based way to convert between BDT, INR, USD, EUR and 30+ currencies. The tool works well for quick checks on mobile or desktop, and the supporting explanation helps you understand the result instead of treating it like a black box.
How to use this tool
- Enter the value you want to convert and choose the source unit first.
- Select the target unit to see the converted result instantly without refreshing the page.
- Use the result as a quick reference, then compare related units if you need a broader context.
Why conversion errors usually happen
Most conversion mistakes happen because the wrong unit, base, or direction was selected at the start. A tiny mismatch can turn into an expensive or frustrating error when you are dealing with money, dimensions, recipes, file formats, or travel planning.
The safest habit is to confirm the input unit first, then sanity-check whether the output feels reasonable before you copy it into a purchase, form, spreadsheet, or message.
When this result is useful
This is helpful when you are moving between systems, recipes, documents, academic work, or country-specific conventions.
It saves time when you need a quick answer for currency without opening a spreadsheet or manually checking tables.
A quick conversion example
Suppose you are switching between two systems while shopping, travelling, preparing a recipe, or filling in a form. Currency Converter helps you convert the value immediately and reduces the chance of a unit mistake.
That matters most when small differences affect cost, safety, measurements, or official entries. A fast conversion is often easier than doing manual steps in your head.
Common conversion mistakes to avoid
- Selecting the wrong source unit at the first step.
- Copying a number without checking whether it is rounded or approximate.
- Mixing regional formats such as decimal separators, currencies, or date conventions.
- Assuming every provider or platform uses the exact same reference standard.
Sources and notes
Exchange-rate outputs are for quick reference. Actual remittance, card, bank, and cash rates can differ because of spreads, fees, timing, and provider-specific pricing.
Reference sources