Whether you’re booking a holiday, shopping on a foreign website, or sending money abroad, you need to know what one currency is worth in another. “How much is $100 in my currency?” or “What’s my budget in euros?” A currency converter answers that in seconds. You enter the amount and the two currencies—say US dollars and Indian rupees—and the tool gives you the converted value using current or recent exchange rates. It’s one of those things that seems trivial until you need it, and then you’re glad it’s there.
Rates move all the time. The number you see is a snapshot—often from a feed or a mid-market rate. When you actually change money at a bank, an ATM, or a payment app, you’ll usually get a slightly different rate, and there may be fees or a margin. So the converter is best used as an estimate: “Roughly how much will this cost?” or “Approximately how much will they receive?” For big transfers or important decisions, check the rate and fees with your bank or provider. For quick checks—at the airport, online shopping, or splitting a bill abroad—a converter is exactly what you need.
Travellers use it to convert their daily budget, so they know how much they’re really spending in their home currency. Shoppers use it to see the true cost of an item listed in another currency. Businesses use it for invoices, expense reports, and pricing. The use cases are endless. What matters is that you’re not guessing. Even a rough number is better than no number, and a good converter updates regularly so “rough” is often close enough for planning.
We have a free currency converter that works in your browser. You choose the two currencies, enter the amount, and get the conversion. You can switch the direction or change the amount as often as you like. We don’t store your data or ask you to sign up. For large or important transactions, always confirm the actual rate and any charges with your bank or payment provider—but for everyday estimation, this should do the job.