PayPal is familiar to clients, but it is not enough for freelancers in Bangladesh. Fees stack, FX spread is retained by PayPal, seller payments can be held, and country rules decide whether you can receive or withdraw at all. Hawala is the alternative built for emerging-market freelancers: no Hawala account fee, no balance fee, no international Visa card fee, no hidden FX markup, USD and EUR accounts, stablecoin balances, and an international virtual Visa card.
Quick comparison: Hawala, PayPal, Wise, and Payoneer
| Feature | Hawala | PayPal | Wise | Payoneer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Account and card fees | No Hawala account fee. No balance fee. No international Visa card fee. | No monthly account fee in many markets; card and withdrawal options are country-specific. | No monthly personal account fee; card issuance/replacement and conversion fees can apply. | Annual, card, ATM, conversion, and inactivity fees can apply. |
| Transfer and FX fees | No hidden FX markup; live transfer pricing shown in-app. | Commercial fees can include 3.49% + fixed fee, plus 1.50% international, plus PayPal FX spread. | Transparent fixed + percentage transfer fees; currency availability varies. | Receive, conversion, withdrawal, and marketplace fees can stack. |
| Can receive international client payments in Bangladesh | Yes | No standard PayPal receiving route | Route-dependent | Yes, especially marketplace payouts |
| Can withdraw/use money in Bangladesh | Yes | No standard PayPal withdrawal route | Route-dependent | Yes, with fees and review risk |
| USD and EUR accounts | Yes. Open both USD and EUR accounts. | Balances and withdrawal rules are country-specific; not a dedicated USD/EUR account product for every freelancer. | Account details vary by country. | Multi-currency receiving accounts |
| Stablecoin balances | USDC, USDT, PYUSD, EURC | No stablecoin balances for freelancer operating balances | No stablecoin balances | No stablecoin balances |
| International card | International virtual Visa, instant in-app | PayPal cards are country-dependent and not available everywhere. | Debit card; country-dependent | Card available in eligible countries, usually physical |
| Account holds / limitations risk | No PayPal-style seller hold on your Hawala account balance | PayPal says seller payments can be held up to 21 days and limitations can restrict sending, receiving, or withdrawing. | Compliance reviews can happen, but Wise is not a PayPal seller-hold system. | Account blocks, reviews, and payout delays are common risk states. |
| Inactivity / annual fees if relevant | None | No universal inactivity fee in the US fee table; country terms can differ. | None for personal accounts in many markets. | $29.95/year can apply in eligible cases. |
Note
* Hawala has no account fee, no balance fee, no international Visa card fee, and no hidden FX markup. Live transfer pricing is pulled from the pricing API when available and always shown in-app before you transfer.
How freelancers in Bangladesh receive USD
Bangladesh Bank regulates all foreign exchange transactions, and individual USD accounts are restricted. The taka has faced depreciation pressure, and the government actively manages the exchange rate. Freelancers, who contribute significantly to Bangladesh's IT exports, often struggle with slow and expensive international payment channels. PayPal may be what the client recognizes, but freelancers in Bangladesh need more than a checkout logo: they need to receive USD, hold value, convert only when they choose, and spend internationally. Hawala lets users open both a USD account and a EUR account, then hold USDC, USDT, PYUSD, and EURC in the same app. For the broader setup, read our USD account guide for Bangladesh, EUR account guide for Bangladesh, and international crypto Visa card guide for Bangladesh.
PayPal fees in Bangladesh
PayPal's US merchant table lists PayPal Checkout at 3.49% + fixed fee, Goods and Services at 2.99%, and an extra 1.50% for international commercial transactions. PayPal also says its transaction exchange rate includes a currency conversion spread retained by PayPal. The practical issue in Bangladesh is account access and withdrawal, before pricing. Build the invoice route around something the freelancer can actually use. On a $1,000 international client payment, a US-style PayPal Checkout fee stack can mean $34.90 plus a fixed fee, plus another $15 for the international commercial fee, before FX spread or withdrawal friction.
Competitor breakdown
PayPal
PayPal does not list Bangladesh in its Payouts country-feature table. For Bangladeshi freelancers, that means PayPal should not be treated as a dependable receive-and-withdraw account. PayPal is too fragile as a primary Bangladesh freelancer route. Use a USD account, EUR account, Wise where available, Payoneer marketplace rails, or Hawala as the operating account. If the account is already limited, frozen, holding funds, or stuck on withdrawal, start with the PayPal limitation checklist, frozen account checklist, funds-on-hold checklist, or withdrawal pending checklist.
Wise
Wise is strong for transparent bank transfers and supported account details, especially in the UK, EU, US, Canada, Australia, and mature corridors. In Bangladesh, the key question is narrower: can you receive from clients, hold value, send money out, and spend internationally without being forced into immediate taka conversion? If Wise gives you that full loop, use it. If it only solves one leg, keep a second operating account.
Payoneer
Payoneer is still relevant for marketplace payouts from Upwork, Fiverr, Amazon, and other platforms. But it brings its own fee and account-risk stack: receiving, conversion, withdrawal, inactivity, card, and review issues can all matter. If Payoneer becomes the backup to PayPal, read the Payoneer closed account checklist and Payoneer blocked account checklist before treating it as risk-free.
Why Hawala
Hawala has no Hawala account fee, no balance fee, no international Visa card fee, and no hidden FX markup; live transfer pricing is shown in-app before you move money. Hawala lets freelancers in Bangladesh open both USD and EUR accounts, hold USDC, USDT, PYUSD, and EURC, and spend globally with an international virtual Visa card. That is the difference: PayPal is a client checkout network with holds and country rules; Hawala is the operating account for freelancers who need to keep dollar and euro value instead of immediately converting into taka. Get started.
Related articles for freelancers in Bangladesh
- •How to open a USD account in Bangladesh
- •How to open a EUR account in Bangladesh
- •How to get an international crypto Visa card in Bangladesh
- •PayPal account limited: what freelancers should do
- •PayPal holding funds: what freelancers should do
Frequently Asked Questions
Hawala is built for freelancers in Bangladesh who need USD and EUR accounts, stablecoin balances, no Hawala account or card fees, no hidden FX markup, and an international virtual Visa card.
PayPal does not list Bangladesh in its Payouts country-feature table. For Bangladeshi freelancers, that means PayPal should not be treated as a dependable receive-and-withdraw account.
PayPal's US merchant table lists PayPal Checkout at 3.49% + fixed fee, Goods and Services at 2.99%, and an extra 1.50% for international commercial transactions. PayPal also says its transaction exchange rate includes a currency conversion spread retained by PayPal. Exact country fees depend on the PayPal account country, payment type, withdrawal method, and currency conversion.
Freelancers in Bangladesh can use USD account products, EUR account products, Wise where supported, Payoneer marketplace rails, direct client transfers, or Hawala. Hawala supports USD and EUR accounts plus USDC, USDT, PYUSD, and EURC balances.
Hawala supports USDC, USDT, PYUSD, and EURC balances, giving freelancers a way to hold dollar and euro value without immediately converting earnings into local currency.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Always consult with appropriate professionals before making financial decisions.
