You work hard for your money in Europe as NRI. When you send a large amount home to India, the last thing you want is a service that loses your money to hidden fees, low exchange rates, or slow processing. Picking the wrong remittance service can cost you hundreds of euros on a single transfer.
This guide covers seven specific red flags. If you see any of these, step back before you make a transaction.
Why large NRI transfers need more scrutiny
India received a record $135 billion in remittances in FY 2025. That volume attracts both legitimate fintech players and bad actors. From Europe specifically, the volume has grown fast as the Indian diaspora in the UK, Germany, Netherlands, and France sends money home more often and in larger amounts.
Banks and regulators have to ensure that the money being sent is legitimate, properly documented, and not linked to activities like money laundering or fraud. Since different countries have their own financial laws, exchange regulations, and reporting requirements, larger transactions naturally attract closer checks to verify the source of funds, the purpose of transfer, and adherence to both European and Indian regulatory frameworks.
What are 7 Red Flags to Watch for Large NRI Transfer
Here is what to watch for, while sending the money home next home.
No clear regulatory licence
Any remittance provider operating in Europe must hold a licence from a recognised financial authority. In the EU, providers operate under PSD2 (Payment Services Directive 2) and must be registered with national regulators such as BaFin in Germany, DNB in the Netherlands, or the Banque de France. Similarly, in the UK, providers are controlled by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).
If a service does not display its licence number on their website, or if you cannot verify it on the regulator's public register, stop there.
You can also understand how PSD2 regulations apply to remittances before choosing a provider.
Real example: In 2024, Action Fraud in the UK reported multiple cases of unlicensed money transfer operators targeting South Asian communities online. Victims lost between £3,000 and £40,000 each, with near-zero recovery rates.
- Search the EBA's EUCLID register for licensed payment institutions in EU
- Search the FCA register at register.fca.org.uk before using any UK-based service
- A legitimate provider will link to its licence directly you should not have to dig for it
Vague exchange rate disclosure
The exchange rate is where most services quietly take money from you. The mid-market rate you see on Google is the real rate. Most banks and many transfer apps add a markup of 1% to 3% on top of that. On a €10,000 transfer, an average ~2% markup means you lose €200 before any fee is charged.
What to look for while making the transaction:
- The service shows you the exact INR amount before you confirm not after
- The rate is disclosed as a specific number, not described as "competitive" or "great value"
- Verify the offered exchange rate against the Google rate at the time of the transaction
ScopeX, for instance, gives you 25 paise above the Google rate which means you get more INR than the mid-market rate. That is the direction a fair rate should go.
Dig deeper: How EUR to INR rates impact your transfer value
Hidden fees buried in fine print
"Zero fee" claims are common. Some are genuine. Many are not. The trick is applying the markup at the exchange rate instead of charging a flat fee. The net result is the same you pay but it is harder to see.
Other ways fees appear on large transfers:
- Correspondent bank charges deducted in transit (common with SWIFT transfers)
- Receiving bank charges in India that the sender did not know about
- Currency conversion fees applied twice on both ends
- Charges for transfers above a certain threshold (e.g., above €5,000)
Red flag: A transparent service tells you the total cost in euros before you confirm.
With ScopeX, the transfer fee is zero. What you see in the confirmation is what your family receives.
Slow transfer timelines with no commitment
Some services say transfers take "1–5 business days", without any fixed timeline. A provider that cannot commit to a timeline does not control its own processing.
Large transfers above certain thresholds may require additional compliance checks, which is normal. But the service should tell you this upfront, not after you have already sent it.
In the scenario, Ask the service: what is the guaranteed delivery time for a transfer of this size? Check if the platform provides a live status tracker once the transfer is initiated. And finally, look at reviews on Trustpilot or Google specifically mentioning transfer speed for large amounts.
ScopeX processes transfers in five minutes for standard transactions. For larger amounts, the timeline is disclosed before you confirm the transaction. Hence, 100% transparency and fair practices.
Poor customer support structure
Send a basic query through the support channel. Note how long it takes to get a response. If you get an auto-reply that closes your ticket, or a chatbot that loops without resolution, that is the quality of support you will get when a large amount is stuck in processing.
Red flags:
- No phone number listed
- No live chat with a human
- Support is only through a contact form with a 48-hour response SLA.
Fake app or cloned website
Fraudsters build apps and websites that look like legitimate remittance platforms. Once you deposit, the money disappears. This is a growing problem in the NRI community in Europe. Scammers target WhatsApp groups and Facebook communities with links to fake platforms offering "special rates for Diwali" or "EOFY transfer deals."
Before trusting any platform, check if it is safe to send money to India online and always verify the source.
Red flag: An app not listed in the official Apple App Store or Google Play Store. Or a website with a domain like "scopex-transfer.net" instead of the official domain. Always verify the URL character by character.
- Download apps only from official stores and verify the developer name matches the company
- Bookmark the official website after your first visit do not use links from messages
- Check the app's review history, a new app with five-star reviews and no negative feedback is suspicious
- Legitimate providers do not ask you to complete a transfer via WhatsApp or Telegram
No transaction tracking after sending
Once money leaves your account, you need visibility into where it is. A provider that offers no tracking, no reference number, no status updates, no confirmation to the recipient is not built for accountability.
For large transfers, tracking matters for two reasons; peace of mind, and documentation. Under FEMA regulations, both you and your family member in India may need records of the transfer for bank compliance or tax purposes. A transaction ID and a clear timestamp are the minimum requirements.
One more thing: check the rate on the day you transfer
Exchange rates move every day. A service with a good rate today can offer a worse rate tomorrow if they widen their margin. For large transfers, check the rate against Google at the exact time you plan to send. If the difference is more than 0.5%, either negotiate or use a different provider.
NRIs in Europe sending money home are often supporting property purchases, medical costs, or retirement planning for parents. None of these can afford a hefty fee every time a transfer goes through.
Sources & Disclaimer
The information in this article is based on publicly available provider disclosures, marketing materials, industry reports, and general remittance market practices at the time of writing. Exchange rates, fees, transfer speeds, and availability may vary by country, payment method, bank, and time period.
Company names mentioned are included for illustrative and comparative purposes only. Any performance metrics, pricing examples, or user experiences referenced reflect advertised claims or individual reports and should not be treated as guarantees. Readers are encouraged to verify live rates, fees, and terms directly with the service provider before initiating a transfer.
This content is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, investment advice, or a recommendation of any specific service.