Swift code denizbank
Swift code denizbank
DENITRIS XXX
DENIZBANK A.S. детали BIC/SWIFT-кода
Используйте Wise для выгодных международных переводов
Wise выгоднее и быстрее, чем большинство банков, а создание профиля займет всего несколько секунд.
Что означают эти буквы и цифры?
SWIFT-код (иногда номер SWIFT) — это стандартный формат Идентификационного кода банка (Business Identifier Codes (BIC)), используемый для идентификации банков и финансовых учреждений в международной банковской сети. Данный код содержит информацию о наименовании и месторасположении банка — своего рода международный код или ID банка.
Эти коды используются при осуществлении межбанковских денежных переводов, в особенности международных переводов Wire и SEPA-переводов. Данные коды также используются в межбанковской коммуникации для обмена информацией между различными банками.
Последнее обновление базы: May 2022
Что такое SWIFT-код?
SWIFT-код — это стандартный формат банковских идентификационных кодов (BIC), используемый для указания конкретного банка или филиала. Эти коды применяются при переводе денег и передаче финансовой информации между банками, особенно при международных банковских переводах.
SWIFT-коды состоят из 8 или 11 символов. При этом 11-значные коды определяют конкретный филиал банка, а 8-значные коды (или коды, заканчивающиеся на «XXX») — главный офис. Формат у SWIFT-кодов следующий:
Недостатки международных переводов, оформляемых в банке
Если вы пользуетесь услугами банка для отправки и получения денег, то можете переплачивать из-за невыгодного обменного курса и скрытых комиссий. И всё потому, что банки по-прежнему используют устаревшую систему обмена денег. Мы рекомендуем пользоваться Wise (ранее TransferWise), что намного дешевле благодаря инновационным технологиям:
Регистрация кодов SWIFT регулируется Организацией всемирной межбанковской финансовой связи (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, SWIFT), штаб-квартира которой находится в Ла-Юльпе, Бельгия. SWIFT является зарегистрированной торговой маркой S. W. I. F. T. SCRL, официальный адрес головного офиса: Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Бельгия.
Веб-сайт TheSwiftCodes.com управляется Wise Payments Limited (‘Мы’), компанией, зарегистрированной в соответствии с законодательством Англии и Уэльса под номером 07209813.
Вы переплачиваете банкам за денежные переводы?
Когда вы отправляете или получаете деньги через свой банк, с вас часто взимается дополнительная комиссия, скрытая за невыгодным обменным курсом.
Миллионы людей уже сэкономили деньги с помощью Wise – начните экономить и вы! Пользуясь Wise (ранее TransferWise) для отправки и получения переводов, вы будете конвертировать деньги по реальному обменному курсу, а первый перевод на сумму до 500 фунтов стерлингов (или эквивалент в другой валюте) будет бесплатным.
DENITRIS340
DENIZBANK A.S. детали BIC/SWIFT-кода
Используйте Wise для выгодных международных переводов
Wise выгоднее и быстрее, чем большинство банков, а создание профиля займет всего несколько секунд.
Что означают эти буквы и цифры?
SWIFT-код (иногда номер SWIFT) — это стандартный формат Идентификационного кода банка (Business Identifier Codes (BIC)), используемый для идентификации банков и финансовых учреждений в международной банковской сети. Данный код содержит информацию о наименовании и месторасположении банка — своего рода международный код или ID банка.
Эти коды используются при осуществлении межбанковских денежных переводов, в особенности международных переводов Wire и SEPA-переводов. Данные коды также используются в межбанковской коммуникации для обмена информацией между различными банками.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
Banks use SWIFT for international transfers, but it’s not the most efficient or cost-effective solution as you you might get a bad exchange rate and pay high fees. We recommend using Wise, formerly TransferWise, which is up to 5x cheaper and gives you a great rate.
DENIZBANK A.S. Branches’ Swift Codes
Institution | SWIFT code | Branch name | City | Country | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRISXXX | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | |||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS323 | (KUZEY ADANA) | ADANA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS327 | (YUREGIR) | ADANA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS940 | (ADANA BRANCH) | ADANA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS234 | (ADANA CARSI) | ADANA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS201 | (ADAPAZARI BRANCH) | ADAPAZARI | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS338 | (ADIYAMAN) | ADIYAMAN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS212 | (AFYON) | AFYON | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS336 | (AKSARAY) | AKSARAY | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS271 | (MITHATPASA) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS310 | (OSTIM) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS320 | (SITELER ANKARA) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS341 | (ANKARA BASKENT OZEL BANKACILIK MERKEZI) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS343 | (BASKENT UNIVERSITESI) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS352 | (POLATLI) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS362 | (KECIOREN) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS373 | (SINCAN) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS910 | (GAZIOSMANPASA BRANCH) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS933 | (ULUS BRANCH) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS965 | (CANKAYA BRANCH) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS979 | (BAHCELIEVELER BRANCH) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS211 | (YILDIZ BRANCH) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS216 | (CEBECI) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS218 | (GIMAT BRANCH) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS909 | (ANKARA BRANCH) | ANKARA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS972 | (ANTAKYA BRANCH) | ANTAKYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS275 | (ANTALYA HAL) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS289 | (ANTALYA CARSI) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS291 | (ALANYA CARSI) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS292 | (SIDE) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS296 | (DEMRE) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS297 | (GAZIPASA) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS333 | (LARA) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS368 | (AKDENIZ TICARI MERKEZ) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS916 | (ANTALYA BRANCH) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS235 | (KUMLUCA) | ANTALYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS279 | (GERMENCIK) | AYDIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS280 | (CINE) | AYDIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS287 | (KUSADASI CARSI) | AYDIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS994 | (NAZILLI) | AYDIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS997 | (KUSADASI BRANCH) | AYDIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS256 | (INCIRLIOVA) | AYDIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS259 | (SOKE) | AYDIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS962 | (BALIKESIR BRANCH) | BALIKESIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS236 | (BANDIRMA) | BALIKESIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS254 | (AYVALIK) | BALIKESIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS255 | (EDREMIT) | BALIKESIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS251 | (BATMAN) | BATMAN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS982 | (BOLU) | BOLU | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS316 | (BURSA YILDIRIM) | BURSA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS334 | (INEGOL) | BURSA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS908 | (BURSA BRANCH) | BURSA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS947 | (BURSA HEYKEL BRANCH) | BURSA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS989 | (CEKIRGE BRANCH) | BURSA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS237 | (CANAKKALE) | CANAKKALE | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS968 | (CORUM) | CORUM | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS313 | (HALK CADDESI) | DENIZLI | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS917 | (DENIZLI BRANCH) | DENIZLI | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS359 | (DAGKAPI) | DIYARBAKIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS941 | (DIYARBAKIR BRANCH) | DIYARBAKIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS202 | (SILOPI) | DIYARBAKIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS335 | (DUZCE) | DUZCE | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS969 | (EDIRNE) | EDIRNE | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS967 | (ELAZIG BRANCH) | ELAZIG | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS315 | (ERZURUM) | ERZURUM | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS360 | (ESKISEHIR SANAYI) | ESKISEHIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS988 | (ESKISEHIR BRANCH) | ESKISEHIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS939 | (GAZIANTEP BRANCH) | GAZIANTEP | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS330 | (GIRESUN) | GIRESUN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS954 | (ISKENDERUN BRANCH) | ISKENDERUN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS974 | (ISPARTA) | ISPARTA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS276 | (PERPA) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS281 | (ALTIN BORSASI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS303 | (MERCAN SUBESI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS306 | (SULTANCIFTLIGI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS308 | (BESIKTAS) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS314 | (MODA) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS317 | (TOPKAPI SANAYI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS318 | (KUCUKYALI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS321 | (DEMIRCILER SITESI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS322 | (ORTAKOY) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS324 | (SAHRAYICEDIT) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS326 | (MECIDIYEKOY) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS329 | (ISTOC) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS337 | (CIFTEHAVUZLAR) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS340 | (OZEL BANKACILIK MERKEZI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS344 | (ISTINYE) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS346 | (BUYUKADA) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS349 | (BASAKSEHIR) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS355 | (BANKALAR CADDESI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS357 | (OTOCENTER) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS372 | (UMRANIYE SANAYII) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS374 | (KERESTECILER SITESI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS378 | (BAHCESEHIR UNIVERSITESI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS902 | (KARAKOY BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS904 | (SULTANHAMAM BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS905 | (ELMADAG BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS906 | (KOZYATAGI BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS911 | (KARTAL BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS912 | (BAKIRKOY BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS914 | (ZINCIRLIKUYU BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS915 | (TREASURY OPERATIONS DIVISION) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS918 | (GUNESLI BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS920 | (ATAKOY BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS921 | (KIZILTOPRAK BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS922 | (YESILKOY BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS923 | (ETILER BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS924 | (KAZASKER BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS925 | (BAYRAMPASA BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS926 | (SUADIYE BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS927 | (ATRIUM) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS929 | (AVCILAR BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS931 | (YESILYURT BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS932 | (MALTEPE BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS936 | (BAHCELIEVLER) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS937 | (BEBEK BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS944 | (SIRINEVLER BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS945 | (LEVENT BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS952 | (UMRANIYE BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS956 | (KADIKOY BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS957 | (SEFAKOY BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS958 | (KARTAL CARSI BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS961 | (AKSARAY BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS963 | (1.LEVENT BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS966 | (MERTER BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS971 | (FATIH BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS975 | (BEYOGLU BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS977 | (ZEYTINBURNU BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS984 | (4.LEVENT BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS985 | (AYAZAGA BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS986 | (USKUDAR BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS992 | (DUDULLU BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS993 | (ALTUNIZADE BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS996 | (NISANTASI BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS134 | (VOSTRO DEPARTMENT) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS204 | (BAKIRKOY CARSI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS206 | (HARBIYE BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS210 | (MASLAK BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS219 | (GOP BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS221 | (IKITELLI BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS223 | (PENDIK BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS224 | (RAMI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS225 | (SASKINBAKKAL BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS226 | (TOPCULAR BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS227 | (GUNGOREN BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS238 | (BAGCILAR) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS239 | (A.H.L. FREE ZONE BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS240 | (BESYUZEVLER) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS241 | (KAVACIK BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS242 | (BEYLIKDUZU BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS243 | (NURUOSMANIYE) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS244 | (FINDIKZADE) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS245 | (ALTIYOL BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS246 | (CAGLAYAN BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS247 | (CARSI IKITELLI) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS248 | (TUZLA TERSANE BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS252 | (GOZTEPE ISTASYON BRANCH) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS261 | (MEGA CENTER) | ISTANBUL | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS272 | (BERGAMA) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS274 | (MENEMEN) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS277 | (MIMAR KEMALETTIN) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS278 | (ISIKKENT) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS286 | (SAIR ESREF) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS309 | (BUCA) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS342 | (EGE OZEL BANKACILIK MERKEZI) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS353 | (BALCOVA) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS361 | (GAZIEMIR) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS907 | (IZMIR BRANCH) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS919 | (ALSANCAK BRANCH) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS942 | (BORNOVA BRANCH) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS948 | (KARSIYAKA) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS970 | (EGE SERBEST BOLGE BRANCH) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS976 | (HATAY IZMIR) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS998 | (KARABAGLAR BRANCH) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS208 | (IZMIR GIDA CARSISI BRANCH) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS257 | (ODEMIS) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS258 | (TORBALI) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS260 | (TIRE) | IZMIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS978 | (GEBZE BRANCH) | IZMIT | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS200 | (IZMIT BRANCH) | IZMIT | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS207 | (KAHRAMANMARAS BRANCH) | KAHRAMANMARAS | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS222 | (KARABUK BRANCH) | KARABUK | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS943 | (KAYSERI BRANCH) | KAYSERI | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS354 | (KIRIKKALE) | KIRIKKALE | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS953 | (LULEBURGAZ) | KIRKLARELI | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS311 | (MEVLANA) | KONYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS949 | (KONYA BRANCH) | KONYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS229 | (YENI TOPTANCILAR BRANCH) | KONYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS249 | (KUTAHYA) | KUTAHYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS980 | (MALATYA BRANCH) | MALATYA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS263 | (ALASEHIR) | MANISA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS266 | (SALIHLI) | MANISA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS295 | (SARIGOL) | MANISA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS325 | (TURGUTLU) | MANISA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS928 | (MANISA BRANCH) | MANISA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS262 | (AKHISAR) | MANISA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS300 | (ANAMUR) | MERSIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS312 | (TARSUS) | MERSIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS347 | (SILIFKE) | MERSIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS350 | (TARSUS HAL) | MERSIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS365 | (METROPOL) | MERSIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS955 | (MERSIN BRANCH) | MERSIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS990 | (MERSIN SERBEST BOLGE BRANCH) | MERSIN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS264 | (MILAS) | MUGLA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS265 | (ORTACA) | MUGLA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS267 | (CARSI BODRUM) | MUGLA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS367 | (DALAMAN HAVALIMANI) | MUGLA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS964 | (BODRUM BRANCH) | MUGLA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS217 | (FETHIYE) | MUGLA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS288 | (URGUP) | NEVSEHIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS364 | (GOREME) | NEVSEHIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS231 | (NEVSEHIR) | NEVSEHIR | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS987 | (ORDU BRANCH) | ORDU | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS348 | (RIZE) | RIZE | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS356 | (BAFRA) | SAMSUN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS983 | (SAMSUN BRANCH) | SAMSUN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS345 | (ZAHIRECILER BORSASI) | SANLIURFA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS233 | (SANLIURFA) | SANLIURFA | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS995 | (SIVAS BRANCH) | SIVAS | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS331 | (TEKIRDAG) | TEKIRDAG | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS938 | (CORLU BRANCH) | TEKIRDAG | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS351 | (TOKAT) | TOKAT | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS903 | (TRABZON BRANCH) | TRABZON | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS209 | (USAK BRANCH) | USAK | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS250 | (VAN) | VAN | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS946 | (KARADENIZ EREGLI BRANCH) | ZONGULDAK | TURKEY | ||
DENIZBANK A.S. | DENITRIS213 | (ZONGULDAK) | ZONGULDAK | TURKEY |
Find the swift code (also called BIC code) for every bank in the world
You have probably come across the need to find a swift code (or BIC code) because you were asked for it through web banking while trying to wire money to a different bank than yours. This is because almost all banks in the world are members of the swift network that is responsible for money transfers and messages between financial (and even non-financial) institutions, and this system requires the use of these codes.
A swift code is a unique identifier for every institution’s branch in the world. This code is absolutely vital for transferring money securely from one institution to another and our site is a specialized search engine for these codes and the institutions that carry them.
An example code would be BARCGB22XXX which is the unique identifier for the main offices of BARCLAYS BANK PLC based in London, UK.
When you browse the swift code database on this website, not only will you be able to locate the BIC code of the institution in question, but you will also be able to find out a plethora of other information related to it. This includes the institution’s location as well as every branch’s physical address. In addition to this, you will be able to find out both the country and city of origin. We believe that www.bank-codes.com is an absolutely vital tool when you are receiving or sending money, or simply wish to find out a bit more about how swift codes operate.
Searching through our website is incredibly easy. You have a number of different options. Firstly, you can type the name of the institution, the BIC code, or any other information you have into the search box on this page. Alternatively, you can browse our swift code database by country, which makes it very easy to find all the institutions that are members of the swift network in a particular country.
DENITRIS134
DENIZBANK A.S. BIC / Swift code details
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So what do these letters and numbers mean?
A SWIFT code — sometimes also called a SWIFT number — is a standard format for Business Identifier Codes (BIC). Banks and financial institutions use them to identify themselves globally. It says who and where they are — a sort of international bank code or ID.
These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international money transfers or SEPA payments. Banks also use these codes to exchange messages between each other.
DENIZBANK A.S.
SWIFT code | DENITRIS134 |
---|---|
Swift code (8 characters) | DENITRIS |
Branch name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
Branch address | DENIZ TOWER, BUYUKDERE CD. 141 |
Branch code | 134 |
Bank name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
City | ISTANBUL |
Country | Turkey |
DENIZBANK A.S. SWIFT Code Details
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Always confirm the details with your recipient
When sending or receiving money, always check the SWIFT code with your recipient or bank.
If you think you’ve used the wrong SWIFT code to send money, you should get in contact with your bank right away. They may be able to cancel the transaction. If it’s too late to cancel, you might have to contact the recipient yourself and request that they return your money.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRISXXX” of “DENIZBANK A.S.”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | |
Branch code | XXX |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRISXXX Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: XXX
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Последнее обновление базы: May 2022
Что такое SWIFT-код?
SWIFT-код — это стандартный формат банковских идентификационных кодов (BIC), используемый для указания конкретного банка или филиала. Эти коды применяются при переводе денег и передаче финансовой информации между банками, особенно при международных банковских переводах.
SWIFT-коды состоят из 8 или 11 символов. При этом 11-значные коды определяют конкретный филиал банка, а 8-значные коды (или коды, заканчивающиеся на «XXX») — главный офис. Формат у SWIFT-кодов следующий:
Недостатки международных переводов, оформляемых в банке
Если вы пользуетесь услугами банка для отправки и получения денег, то можете переплачивать из-за невыгодного обменного курса и скрытых комиссий. И всё потому, что банки по-прежнему используют устаревшую систему обмена денег. Мы рекомендуем пользоваться Wise (ранее TransferWise), что намного дешевле благодаря инновационным технологиям:
Регистрация кодов SWIFT регулируется Организацией всемирной межбанковской финансовой связи (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, SWIFT), штаб-квартира которой находится в Ла-Юльпе, Бельгия. SWIFT является зарегистрированной торговой маркой S. W. I. F. T. SCRL, официальный адрес головного офиса: Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Бельгия.
Веб-сайт TheSwiftCodes.com управляется Wise Payments Limited (‘Мы’), компанией, зарегистрированной в соответствии с законодательством Англии и Уэльса под номером 07209813.
Вы переплачиваете банкам за денежные переводы?
Когда вы отправляете или получаете деньги через свой банк, с вас часто взимается дополнительная комиссия, скрытая за невыгодным обменным курсом.
Миллионы людей уже сэкономили деньги с помощью Wise – начните экономить и вы! Пользуясь Wise (ранее TransferWise) для отправки и получения переводов, вы будете конвертировать деньги по реальному обменному курсу, а первый перевод на сумму до 500 фунтов стерлингов (или эквивалент в другой валюте) будет бесплатным.
Последнее обновление базы: May 2022
Что такое SWIFT-код?
SWIFT-код — это стандартный формат банковских идентификационных кодов (BIC), используемый для указания конкретного банка или филиала. Эти коды применяются при переводе денег и передаче финансовой информации между банками, особенно при международных банковских переводах.
SWIFT-коды состоят из 8 или 11 символов. При этом 11-значные коды определяют конкретный филиал банка, а 8-значные коды (или коды, заканчивающиеся на «XXX») — главный офис. Формат у SWIFT-кодов следующий:
Недостатки международных переводов, оформляемых в банке
Если вы пользуетесь услугами банка для отправки и получения денег, то можете переплачивать из-за невыгодного обменного курса и скрытых комиссий. И всё потому, что банки по-прежнему используют устаревшую систему обмена денег. Мы рекомендуем пользоваться Wise (ранее TransferWise), что намного дешевле благодаря инновационным технологиям:
Регистрация кодов SWIFT регулируется Организацией всемирной межбанковской финансовой связи (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, SWIFT), штаб-квартира которой находится в Ла-Юльпе, Бельгия. SWIFT является зарегистрированной торговой маркой S. W. I. F. T. SCRL, официальный адрес головного офиса: Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Бельгия.
Веб-сайт TheSwiftCodes.com управляется Wise Payments Limited (‘Мы’), компанией, зарегистрированной в соответствии с законодательством Англии и Уэльса под номером 07209813.
Вы переплачиваете банкам за денежные переводы?
Когда вы отправляете или получаете деньги через свой банк, с вас часто взимается дополнительная комиссия, скрытая за невыгодным обменным курсом.
Миллионы людей уже сэкономили деньги с помощью Wise – начните экономить и вы! Пользуясь Wise (ранее TransferWise) для отправки и получения переводов, вы будете конвертировать деньги по реальному обменному курсу, а первый перевод на сумму до 500 фунтов стерлингов (или эквивалент в другой валюте) будет бесплатным.
Последнее обновление базы: May 2022
Что такое SWIFT-код?
SWIFT-код — это стандартный формат банковских идентификационных кодов (BIC), используемый для указания конкретного банка или филиала. Эти коды применяются при переводе денег и передаче финансовой информации между банками, особенно при международных банковских переводах.
SWIFT-коды состоят из 8 или 11 символов. При этом 11-значные коды определяют конкретный филиал банка, а 8-значные коды (или коды, заканчивающиеся на «XXX») — главный офис. Формат у SWIFT-кодов следующий:
Недостатки международных переводов, оформляемых в банке
Если вы пользуетесь услугами банка для отправки и получения денег, то можете переплачивать из-за невыгодного обменного курса и скрытых комиссий. И всё потому, что банки по-прежнему используют устаревшую систему обмена денег. Мы рекомендуем пользоваться Wise (ранее TransferWise), что намного дешевле благодаря инновационным технологиям:
Регистрация кодов SWIFT регулируется Организацией всемирной межбанковской финансовой связи (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, SWIFT), штаб-квартира которой находится в Ла-Юльпе, Бельгия. SWIFT является зарегистрированной торговой маркой S. W. I. F. T. SCRL, официальный адрес головного офиса: Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Бельгия.
Веб-сайт TheSwiftCodes.com управляется Wise Payments Limited (‘Мы’), компанией, зарегистрированной в соответствии с законодательством Англии и Уэльса под номером 07209813.
Вы переплачиваете банкам за денежные переводы?
Когда вы отправляете или получаете деньги через свой банк, с вас часто взимается дополнительная комиссия, скрытая за невыгодным обменным курсом.
Миллионы людей уже сэкономили деньги с помощью Wise – начните экономить и вы! Пользуясь Wise (ранее TransferWise) для отправки и получения переводов, вы будете конвертировать деньги по реальному обменному курсу, а первый перевод на сумму до 500 фунтов стерлингов (или эквивалент в другой валюте) будет бесплатным.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS291” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ALANYA CARSI)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ALANYA CARSI) |
Branch code | 291 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS291 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 291
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Последнее обновление базы данных: 06-JUL-2022
Другие SWIFT-коды для DENIZBANK A.S.
SWIFT-коды ведущих банков в стране: Турция
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Подробнее о SWIFT-кодах
S WIFT/BIC-коды используются для идентификации конкретных банков и филиалов в международных денежных переводах, чтобы убедиться, что Ваши деньги поступят на соответствующий счет. Эти коды используются банками для обработки международных банковских переводов и сообщений.
Все SWIFT-коды состоят из 8 или 11 символов. 11-значный код относится к конкретному филиалу, а 8-значный код (или код, заканчивающийся на XXX) относится к головному офису банка. Регистрация SWIFT-кодов осуществляется Обществом всемирных межбанковских финансовых телекоммуникаций (SWIFT). Термин SWIFT часто используется вместо BIC-кода, обозначающего банковский идентификационный код.
Инструмент для SWIFT-кодов можно рассматривать только в ознакомительных целях. Несмотря на все усилия, прилагаемые для предоставления точных данных, пользователи должны принять тот факт, что этот сайт не несет никакой ответственности за их точность. Только Ваш банк может подтвердить правильную информацию о банковском счете. Если Вы делаете важный платеж, который является критическим по времени, мы рекомендуем сначала связаться с Вашим банком.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS916” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ANTALYA BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ANTALYA BRANCH) |
Branch code | 916 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS916 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 916
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Last database update: May 2022
What is a SWIFT Code?
A SWIFT Code is a standard format of Bank Identifier Code (BIC) used to specify a particular bank or branch. These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international wire transfers. Banks also use these codes for exchanging messages between them.
SWIFT codes comprise of 8 or 11 characters. All 11 digit codes refer to specific branches, while 8 digit codes (or those ending in ‘XXX’) refer to the head or primary office. SWIFT codes are formatted as follows:
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive money using your bank, you might lose out on a bad exchange rate and pay hidden fees as a result. That’s because the banks still use an old system to exchange money. We recommend you use Wise (formerly TransferWise), which is usually much cheaper. With their smart technology:
The registrations of SWIFT codes are handled by Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) and their headquarters is located in La Hulpe, Belgium. SWIFT is the registered trademark of S.W.I.F.T. SCRL with a registered address at Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Belgium.
TheSwiftCodes.com is owned by Wise Payments Ltd. («We», «Us»), a company incorporated under the laws of England and Wales with company number 07209813.
Are you overpaying on bank transfer fees?
When you send or receive money using your bank, you’ll often be charged an additional fee hidden behind a bad exchange rate.
Millions of people have saved money with Wise – you could too! By sending and receiving with Wise (formerly TransferWise) you’ll get the real exchange rate every time, and a free first transfer up to £500.
IKBARUMM XXX
DENIZBANK MOSCOW JSC детали BIC/SWIFT-кода
Используйте Wise для выгодных международных переводов
Wise выгоднее и быстрее, чем большинство банков, а создание профиля займет всего несколько секунд.
Что означают эти буквы и цифры?
SWIFT-код (иногда номер SWIFT) — это стандартный формат Идентификационного кода банка (Business Identifier Codes (BIC)), используемый для идентификации банков и финансовых учреждений в международной банковской сети. Данный код содержит информацию о наименовании и месторасположении банка — своего рода международный код или ID банка.
Эти коды используются при осуществлении межбанковских денежных переводов, в особенности международных переводов Wire и SEPA-переводов. Данные коды также используются в межбанковской коммуникации для обмена информацией между различными банками.
DENIZBANK MOSCOW JSC
SWIFT-код | IKBARUMMXXX |
---|---|
SWIFT-код (8 символов) | IKBARUMM |
Название филиала | DENIZBANK MOSCOW JSC |
Адрес филиала | BUILD 42, 2ND ZVENIGORODSKAYA 13 |
Код филиала | XXX |
Название банка | DENIZBANK MOSCOW JSC |
Город | MOSCOW |
Страна | Russia |
Данные SWIFT-кода DENIZBANK MOSCOW JSC
Сравните цены за перевод денег за границу
У банков и других компании, предоставляющих услуги по денежным переводам есть маленький грязный секрет. Они добавляют скрытые наценки к своим обменным курсам, взимая больше без вашего ведома. И если у них есть комиссия, они взимают ее с вас дважды.
Wise не скрывает дополнительные комиссии в обменном курсе. Мы предлагаем вам настоящий обменный курс, предоставленный Reuters. Сравните наш обменный курс и комиссии с теми, что предлагают Western Union, ICICI Bank, WorldRemit и другие провайдеры.
Всегда уточняйте детали у получателя
Отправляя или получая деньги, всегда проверяйте SWIFT-код с получателем или банком.
Если вы считаете, что использовали неверный SWIFT-код для отправки денег, вам следует немедленно связаться с вашим банком. Возможно, они смогут отменить перевод. Если отмена уже невозможна, вам придется самостоятельно связаться с получателем и попросить его вернуть ваши деньги.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS932” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(MALTEPE BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (MALTEPE BRANCH) |
Branch code | 932 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS932 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 932
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS996” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(NISANTASI BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (NISANTASI BRANCH) |
Branch code | 996 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS996 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 996
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS914” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ZINCIRLIKUYU BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ZINCIRLIKUYU BRANCH) |
Branch code | 914 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS914 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 914
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS971” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(FATIH BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (FATIH BRANCH) |
Branch code | 971 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS971 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 971
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS902” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(KARAKOY BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (KARAKOY BRANCH) |
Branch code | 902 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS902 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 902
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
ESBKATWW XXX
DenizBank AG детали BIC/SWIFT-кода
Используйте Wise для выгодных международных переводов
Wise выгоднее и быстрее, чем большинство банков, а создание профиля займет всего несколько секунд.
Что означают эти буквы и цифры?
SWIFT-код (иногда номер SWIFT) — это стандартный формат Идентификационного кода банка (Business Identifier Codes (BIC)), используемый для идентификации банков и финансовых учреждений в международной банковской сети. Данный код содержит информацию о наименовании и месторасположении банка — своего рода международный код или ID банка.
Эти коды используются при осуществлении межбанковских денежных переводов, в особенности международных переводов Wire и SEPA-переводов. Данные коды также используются в межбанковской коммуникации для обмена информацией между различными банками.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS347” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(SILIFKE)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (SILIFKE) |
Branch code | 347 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS347 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 347
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “ESBKATWWXXX” of “DENIZBANK AG”.
Institution | DENIZBANK AG |
---|---|
Branch name | |
Branch code | XXX |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
ESBKATWWXXX Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
ESBKATWW Click to copy it
Branch code: XXX
Institution’s 4-letter code: ESBK
Country code: AT
Location code: WW
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS964” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(BODRUM BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (BODRUM BRANCH) |
Branch code | 964 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS964 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 964
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS926” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(SUADIYE BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (SUADIYE BRANCH) |
Branch code | 926 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS926 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 926
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS308” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(BESIKTAS)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (BESIKTAS) |
Branch code | 308 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS308 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 308
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS923” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ETILER BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ETILER BRANCH) |
Branch code | 923 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS923 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 923
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
DENITRIS915
DENIZBANK A.S. BIC / Swift code details
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So what do these letters and numbers mean?
A SWIFT code — sometimes also called a SWIFT number — is a standard format for Business Identifier Codes (BIC). Banks and financial institutions use them to identify themselves globally. It says who and where they are — a sort of international bank code or ID.
These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international money transfers or SEPA payments. Banks also use these codes to exchange messages between each other.
DENIZBANK A.S.
SWIFT code | DENITRIS915 |
---|---|
Swift code (8 characters) | DENITRIS |
Branch name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
Branch address | DENIZ TOWER, BUYUKDERE CD. 141 |
Branch code | 915 |
Bank name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
City | ISTANBUL |
Country | Turkey |
DENIZBANK A.S. SWIFT Code Details
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Always confirm the details with your recipient
When sending or receiving money, always check the SWIFT code with your recipient or bank.
If you think you’ve used the wrong SWIFT code to send money, you should get in contact with your bank right away. They may be able to cancel the transaction. If it’s too late to cancel, you might have to contact the recipient yourself and request that they return your money.
BIC Denizbank A.Ş., İstanbul (Турция) (СВИФТ-кодов / SWIFT code)
БИК Denizbank A.Ş. в İstanbul — DENITRISXXX. Сокращение BIC означает Business Identifier Code (т.е. «идентификационный код предприятия»). Ранее эта аббревиатура расшифровывалась, как Bank Identifier Code (т.е. «банковский идентификационный код»). Это международный стандартизированный код, предназначенный для идентификации филиалов в платежных операциях. Его используют кредитные организации, брокеры и аналогичные компании по всему миру, и он позволяет однозначно идентифицировать каждого партнера, который прямо или косвенно участвует в платежных операциях. В таких операциях код BIC или SWIFT BIC используется в сочетании с IBAN (= International Bank Account Number, что означает «международный номер банковского счета»). При этом BIC идентифицирует банк, а IBAN — соответствующий счет в данном банке.
Если взять вымышленный номер счета 234565524 и код банка 34565524, получится следующий IBAN — TR99 3456 5524 2345 6552 4. Для улучшения читаемости IBAN он, как правило, делится на блоки из четырех символов. IBAN может содержать максимум 34 символа, но в большинстве стран он короче.
BIC также содержит код страны. В отличие от IBAN, код страны находится не в начале BIC, а в позициях 5 и 6. Например, в BIC DENITRISXXX код страны — TR. В некоторых случаях код страны в IBAN может отличаться от кода страны в соответствующем BIC из-за применения различных стандартов.
BIC состоит из 8 или 11 символов и не содержит собственного контрольного числа. В отличие от IBAN, BIC можно проверить только по количеству символов, а также в каталоге кодов BIC, который регулярно обновляется системой SWIFT. В свою очередь, для формальной проверки правильности номера счета IBAN можно использовать математическую операцию и содержащееся в самом номере контрольное число. При этом могут существовать только формально правильные номера IBAN. Однако ответить на вопрос о том, действительно ли существует конкретный IBAN, может только соответствующий банк. Поддельные или уже не существующие номера IBAN невозможно распознать с помощью контрольного числа.
Его штаб-квартира — это Denizbank A.Ş. в İstanbul. В свою очередь, İstanbul находится в Турция. С Denizbank A.Ş. можно связаться по телефону 212-348 20 00.
Мы не можем гарантировать точность информации.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS331” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(TEKIRDAG)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (TEKIRDAG) |
Branch code | 331 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS331 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 331
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Последнее обновление базы данных: 06-JUL-2022
Другие SWIFT-коды для DENIZBANK A.S.
SWIFT-коды ведущих банков в стране: Турция
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Подробнее о SWIFT-кодах
S WIFT/BIC-коды используются для идентификации конкретных банков и филиалов в международных денежных переводах, чтобы убедиться, что Ваши деньги поступят на соответствующий счет. Эти коды используются банками для обработки международных банковских переводов и сообщений.
Все SWIFT-коды состоят из 8 или 11 символов. 11-значный код относится к конкретному филиалу, а 8-значный код (или код, заканчивающийся на XXX) относится к головному офису банка. Регистрация SWIFT-кодов осуществляется Обществом всемирных межбанковских финансовых телекоммуникаций (SWIFT). Термин SWIFT часто используется вместо BIC-кода, обозначающего банковский идентификационный код.
Инструмент для SWIFT-кодов можно рассматривать только в ознакомительных целях. Несмотря на все усилия, прилагаемые для предоставления точных данных, пользователи должны принять тот факт, что этот сайт не несет никакой ответственности за их точность. Только Ваш банк может подтвердить правильную информацию о банковском счете. Если Вы делаете важный платеж, который является критическим по времени, мы рекомендуем сначала связаться с Вашим банком.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS209” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(USAK BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (USAK BRANCH) |
Branch code | 209 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS209 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 209
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
DENITRIS915
DENIZBANK A.S. детали BIC/SWIFT-кода
Используйте Wise для выгодных международных переводов
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Что означают эти буквы и цифры?
SWIFT-код (иногда номер SWIFT) — это стандартный формат Идентификационного кода банка (Business Identifier Codes (BIC)), используемый для идентификации банков и финансовых учреждений в международной банковской сети. Данный код содержит информацию о наименовании и месторасположении банка — своего рода международный код или ID банка.
Эти коды используются при осуществлении межбанковских денежных переводов, в особенности международных переводов Wire и SEPA-переводов. Данные коды также используются в межбанковской коммуникации для обмена информацией между различными банками.
BIC Denizbank A.Ş., Alanya Çarşı, Antalya (Турция) (СВИФТ-кодов / SWIFT code)
БИК Denizbank A.Ş., Alanya Çarşı в Antalya — DENITRISXXX. Сокращение BIC означает Business Identifier Code (т.е. «идентификационный код предприятия»). Ранее эта аббревиатура расшифровывалась, как Bank Identifier Code (т.е. «банковский идентификационный код»). Это международный стандартизированный код, предназначенный для идентификации филиалов в платежных операциях. Его используют кредитные организации, брокеры и аналогичные компании по всему миру, и он позволяет однозначно идентифицировать каждого партнера, который прямо или косвенно участвует в платежных операциях. В таких операциях код BIC или SWIFT BIC используется в сочетании с IBAN (= International Bank Account Number, что означает «международный номер банковского счета»). При этом BIC идентифицирует банк, а IBAN — соответствующий счет в данном банке.
Если взять вымышленный номер счета 419750389 и код банка 19750389, получится следующий IBAN — TR99 1975 0389 4197 5038 9. Для улучшения читаемости IBAN он, как правило, делится на блоки из четырех символов. IBAN может содержать максимум 34 символа, но в большинстве стран он короче.
BIC также содержит код страны. В отличие от IBAN, код страны находится не в начале BIC, а в позициях 5 и 6. Например, в BIC DENITRISXXX код страны — TR. В некоторых случаях код страны в IBAN может отличаться от кода страны в соответствующем BIC из-за применения различных стандартов.
BIC состоит из 8 или 11 символов и не содержит собственного контрольного числа. В отличие от IBAN, BIC можно проверить только по количеству символов, а также в каталоге кодов BIC, который регулярно обновляется системой SWIFT. В свою очередь, для формальной проверки правильности номера счета IBAN можно использовать математическую операцию и содержащееся в самом номере контрольное число. При этом могут существовать только формально правильные номера IBAN. Однако ответить на вопрос о том, действительно ли существует конкретный IBAN, может только соответствующий банк. Поддельные или уже не существующие номера IBAN невозможно распознать с помощью контрольного числа.
Его штаб-квартира — это Denizbank A.Ş., Alanya Çarşı в Antalya. В свою очередь, Antalya находится в Турция. С Denizbank A.Ş., Alanya Çarşı можно связаться по телефону 2425137873.
Мы не можем гарантировать точность информации.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS909” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ANKARA BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ANKARA BRANCH) |
Branch code | 909 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS909 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 909
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS977” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ZEYTINBURNU BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ZEYTINBURNU BRANCH) |
Branch code | 977 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS977 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 977
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS265” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ORTACA)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ORTACA) |
Branch code | 265 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS265 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 265
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
BIC Denizbank A.Ş., Finike, Antalya (Турция) (СВИФТ-кодов / SWIFT code)
БИК Denizbank A.Ş., Finike в Antalya — DENITRISXXX. Сокращение BIC означает Business Identifier Code (т.е. «идентификационный код предприятия»). Ранее эта аббревиатура расшифровывалась, как Bank Identifier Code (т.е. «банковский идентификационный код»). Это международный стандартизированный код, предназначенный для идентификации филиалов в платежных операциях. Его используют кредитные организации, брокеры и аналогичные компании по всему миру, и он позволяет однозначно идентифицировать каждого партнера, который прямо или косвенно участвует в платежных операциях. В таких операциях код BIC или SWIFT BIC используется в сочетании с IBAN (= International Bank Account Number, что означает «международный номер банковского счета»). При этом BIC идентифицирует банк, а IBAN — соответствующий счет в данном банке.
Если взять вымышленный номер счета 999996724 и код банка 99996724, получится следующий IBAN — TR99 9999 6724 9999 9672 4. Для улучшения читаемости IBAN он, как правило, делится на блоки из четырех символов. IBAN может содержать максимум 34 символа, но в большинстве стран он короче.
BIC также содержит код страны. В отличие от IBAN, код страны находится не в начале BIC, а в позициях 5 и 6. Например, в BIC DENITRISXXX код страны — TR. В некоторых случаях код страны в IBAN может отличаться от кода страны в соответствующем BIC из-за применения различных стандартов.
BIC состоит из 8 или 11 символов и не содержит собственного контрольного числа. В отличие от IBAN, BIC можно проверить только по количеству символов, а также в каталоге кодов BIC, который регулярно обновляется системой SWIFT. В свою очередь, для формальной проверки правильности номера счета IBAN можно использовать математическую операцию и содержащееся в самом номере контрольное число. При этом могут существовать только формально правильные номера IBAN. Однако ответить на вопрос о том, действительно ли существует конкретный IBAN, может только соответствующий банк. Поддельные или уже не существующие номера IBAN невозможно распознать с помощью контрольного числа.
Его штаб-квартира — это Denizbank A.Ş., Finike в Antalya. В свою очередь, Antalya находится в Турция. С Denizbank A.Ş., Finike можно связаться по телефону 2428658100.
Мы не можем гарантировать точность информации.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS904” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(SULTANHAMAM BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (SULTANHAMAM BRANCH) |
Branch code | 904 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS904 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 904
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Last database update: May 2022
What is a SWIFT Code?
A SWIFT Code is a standard format of Bank Identifier Code (BIC) used to specify a particular bank or branch. These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international wire transfers. Banks also use these codes for exchanging messages between them.
SWIFT codes comprise of 8 or 11 characters. All 11 digit codes refer to specific branches, while 8 digit codes (or those ending in ‘XXX’) refer to the head or primary office. SWIFT codes are formatted as follows:
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive money using your bank, you might lose out on a bad exchange rate and pay hidden fees as a result. That’s because the banks still use an old system to exchange money. We recommend you use Wise (formerly TransferWise), which is usually much cheaper. With their smart technology:
The registrations of SWIFT codes are handled by Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) and their headquarters is located in La Hulpe, Belgium. SWIFT is the registered trademark of S.W.I.F.T. SCRL with a registered address at Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Belgium.
TheSwiftCodes.com is owned by Wise Payments Ltd. («We», «Us»), a company incorporated under the laws of England and Wales with company number 07209813.
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When you send or receive money using your bank, you’ll often be charged an additional fee hidden behind a bad exchange rate.
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A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS988” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ESKISEHIR BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ESKISEHIR BRANCH) |
Branch code | 988 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS988 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 988
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS993” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ALTUNIZADE BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ALTUNIZADE BRANCH) |
Branch code | 993 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS993 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 993
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS986” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(USKUDAR BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (USKUDAR BRANCH) |
Branch code | 986 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS986 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 986
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
BIC Denizbank A.Ş., Kemer, Antalya (Турция) (СВИФТ-кодов / SWIFT code)
БИК Denizbank A.Ş., Kemer в Antalya — DENITRISXXX. Сокращение BIC означает Business Identifier Code (т.е. «идентификационный код предприятия»). Ранее эта аббревиатура расшифровывалась, как Bank Identifier Code (т.е. «банковский идентификационный код»). Это международный стандартизированный код, предназначенный для идентификации филиалов в платежных операциях. Его используют кредитные организации, брокеры и аналогичные компании по всему миру, и он позволяет однозначно идентифицировать каждого партнера, который прямо или косвенно участвует в платежных операциях. В таких операциях код BIC или SWIFT BIC используется в сочетании с IBAN (= International Bank Account Number, что означает «международный номер банковского счета»). При этом BIC идентифицирует банк, а IBAN — соответствующий счет в данном банке.
BIC также содержит код страны. В отличие от IBAN, код страны находится не в начале BIC, а в позициях 5 и 6. Например, в BIC DENITRISXXX код страны — TR. В некоторых случаях код страны в IBAN может отличаться от кода страны в соответствующем BIC из-за применения различных стандартов.
BIC состоит из 8 или 11 символов и не содержит собственного контрольного числа. В отличие от IBAN, BIC можно проверить только по количеству символов, а также в каталоге кодов BIC, который регулярно обновляется системой SWIFT. В свою очередь, для формальной проверки правильности номера счета IBAN можно использовать математическую операцию и содержащееся в самом номере контрольное число. При этом могут существовать только формально правильные номера IBAN. Однако ответить на вопрос о том, действительно ли существует конкретный IBAN, может только соответствующий банк. Поддельные или уже не существующие номера IBAN невозможно распознать с помощью контрольного числа.
Его штаб-квартира — это Denizbank A.Ş., Kemer в Antalya. В свою очередь, Antalya находится в Турция. С Denizbank A.Ş., Kemer можно связаться по телефону 2428142858.
Мы не можем гарантировать точность информации.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS217” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(FETHIYE)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (FETHIYE) |
Branch code | 217 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS217 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 217
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS969” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(EDIRNE)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (EDIRNE) |
Branch code | 969 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS969 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 969
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS918” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(GUNESLI BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (GUNESLI BRANCH) |
Branch code | 918 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS918 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 918
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS225” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(SASKINBAKKAL BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (SASKINBAKKAL BRANCH) |
Branch code | 225 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS225 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 225
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS940” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ADANA BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ADANA BRANCH) |
Branch code | 940 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS940 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 940
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS333” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(LARA)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (LARA) |
Branch code | 333 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS333 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 333
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Last database update: May 2022
What is a SWIFT Code?
A SWIFT Code is a standard format of Bank Identifier Code (BIC) used to specify a particular bank or branch. These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international wire transfers. Banks also use these codes for exchanging messages between them.
SWIFT codes comprise of 8 or 11 characters. All 11 digit codes refer to specific branches, while 8 digit codes (or those ending in ‘XXX’) refer to the head or primary office. SWIFT codes are formatted as follows:
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive money using your bank, you might lose out on a bad exchange rate and pay hidden fees as a result. That’s because the banks still use an old system to exchange money. We recommend you use Wise (formerly TransferWise), which is usually much cheaper. With their smart technology:
The registrations of SWIFT codes are handled by Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) and their headquarters is located in La Hulpe, Belgium. SWIFT is the registered trademark of S.W.I.F.T. SCRL with a registered address at Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Belgium.
TheSwiftCodes.com is owned by Wise Payments Ltd. («We», «Us»), a company incorporated under the laws of England and Wales with company number 07209813.
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DENITRIS340
DENIZBANK A.S. BIC / Swift code details
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So what do these letters and numbers mean?
A SWIFT code — sometimes also called a SWIFT number — is a standard format for Business Identifier Codes (BIC). Banks and financial institutions use them to identify themselves globally. It says who and where they are — a sort of international bank code or ID.
These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international money transfers or SEPA payments. Banks also use these codes to exchange messages between each other.
DENIZBANK A.S.
SWIFT code | DENITRIS340 |
---|---|
Swift code (8 characters) | DENITRIS |
Branch name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
Branch address | DENIZ TOWER, BUYUKDERE CD. 141 |
Branch code | 340 |
Bank name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
City | ISTANBUL |
Country | Turkey |
DENIZBANK A.S. SWIFT Code Details
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Always confirm the details with your recipient
When sending or receiving money, always check the SWIFT code with your recipient or bank.
If you think you’ve used the wrong SWIFT code to send money, you should get in contact with your bank right away. They may be able to cancel the transaction. If it’s too late to cancel, you might have to contact the recipient yourself and request that they return your money.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS259” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(SOKE)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (SOKE) |
Branch code | 259 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS259 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 259
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS329” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ISTOC)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ISTOC) |
Branch code | 329 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS329 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 329
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS296” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(DEMRE)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (DEMRE) |
Branch code | 296 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS296 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 296
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS937” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(BEBEK BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (BEBEK BRANCH) |
Branch code | 937 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS937 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 937
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS235” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(KUMLUCA)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (KUMLUCA) |
Branch code | 235 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS235 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 235
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS267” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(CARSI BODRUM)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (CARSI BODRUM) |
Branch code | 267 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS267 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 267
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS211” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(YILDIZ BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (YILDIZ BRANCH) |
Branch code | 211 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS211 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 211
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS250” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(VAN)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (VAN) |
Branch code | 250 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS250 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 250
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS289” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(ANTALYA CARSI)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (ANTALYA CARSI) |
Branch code | 289 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS289 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 289
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS286” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(SAIR ESREF)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (SAIR ESREF) |
Branch code | 286 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS286 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 286
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Список банков РФ, работающих со SWIFT
дата обновления таблицы 13 августа 2022
Актуально на 13 августа 2022 года.
Список банков, отключенных от SWIFT
Кроме того, что таблица содержит данные о том, какие банки делают СВИФТ-переводы на сегодня, вы можете найти в ней актуальный список кредитных организаций России, попавших под санкции и отключенных от системы SWIFT.
Переводы через SWIFT – что нужно знать
Система SWIFT обеспечивает передачу финансовой информации о межбанковских переводах среди более чем 11 тысяч банков по всему миру. По сути, это единственный способ для расчетов между компаниями и людьми в разных странах мира (если не считать системы безадресных переводов).
Внутри системы переводы идут через специальные идентификаторы – у каждого банка есть свой SWIFT-код, а получателя денег идентифицируют по номеру счета, фамилии и имени (для физлиц) или наименованию (для компаний). То есть, чтобы отправить деньги за границу, нужно знать:
Переводы проходят достаточно быстро – за срок от 1 до 5 дней, но в случае с российскими банками стоит закладывать больше времени. Например, даже не попавший под санкции Райффайзенбанк предупредил своих клиентов о задержке переводов на срок до 3 недель.
Россию не отключили от SWIFT, но некоторым банкам эта система уже недоступна. Кроме того, с учетом рисков и сложностей, Тинькофф банк уже отказался отправлять такие переводы, а также ввел крупную комиссию за их зачисление на счета. Тем не менее, многие другие банки пока продолжают работать с системой SWIFT.
Условия SWIFT-переводов в разных банках
Переводы через SWIFT пока доступны клиентам 35 российских банков. В интернете можно найти список этих банков и размеры комиссии за SWIFT-переводы – но с пометкой, что информация может устареть и быть неактуальной. Мы проверили данные по всем этим банкам – собрав все, что нужно знать об условиях переводов:
Кроме того, мы отдельно выделили банки, которые попали под те или иные санкции. Практика показывает, что если против российского банка ввели санкции, его в обозримом будущем могут отключить и от SWIFT. Кроме того, переводы из этих банков могут проходить дольше, чем из других кредитных организаций – западные банки подвергают входящие переводы от «санкционных» банков усиленному контролю.
Здравствуйте. Относятся ли данные тарифы к ИП, если речь идет о входящем переводе на валютный расчетный счет? Или все выше описанное для физиков?
Здравствуйте, тарифы взяты с официальных страниц банков (при клике на название банка вы попадете на страницу с тарифами). В большинстве случаев тарифы для физиков.
Last database update: May 2022
What is a SWIFT Code?
A SWIFT Code is a standard format of Bank Identifier Code (BIC) used to specify a particular bank or branch. These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international wire transfers. Banks also use these codes for exchanging messages between them.
SWIFT codes comprise of 8 or 11 characters. All 11 digit codes refer to specific branches, while 8 digit codes (or those ending in ‘XXX’) refer to the head or primary office. SWIFT codes are formatted as follows:
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive money using your bank, you might lose out on a bad exchange rate and pay hidden fees as a result. That’s because the banks still use an old system to exchange money. We recommend you use Wise (formerly TransferWise), which is usually much cheaper. With their smart technology:
The registrations of SWIFT codes are handled by Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) and their headquarters is located in La Hulpe, Belgium. SWIFT is the registered trademark of S.W.I.F.T. SCRL with a registered address at Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Belgium.
TheSwiftCodes.com is owned by Wise Payments Ltd. («We», «Us»), a company incorporated under the laws of England and Wales with company number 07209813.
Are you overpaying on bank transfer fees?
When you send or receive money using your bank, you’ll often be charged an additional fee hidden behind a bad exchange rate.
Millions of people have saved money with Wise – you could too! By sending and receiving with Wise (formerly TransferWise) you’ll get the real exchange rate every time, and a free first transfer up to £500.
DENITRIS134
DENIZBANK A.S. BIC / Swift code details
Use Wise for cheaper international bank transfers
Wise is cheaper and faster than most banks – and creating an account only takes a few seconds.
So what do these letters and numbers mean?
A SWIFT code — sometimes also called a SWIFT number — is a standard format for Business Identifier Codes (BIC). Banks and financial institutions use them to identify themselves globally. It says who and where they are — a sort of international bank code or ID.
These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international money transfers or SEPA payments. Banks also use these codes to exchange messages between each other.
DENIZBANK A.S.
SWIFT code | DENITRIS134 |
---|---|
Swift code (8 characters) | DENITRIS |
Branch name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
Branch address | DENIZ TOWER, BUYUKDERE CD. 141 |
Branch code | 134 |
Bank name | DENIZBANK A.S. |
City | ISTANBUL |
Country | Turkey |
DENIZBANK A.S. SWIFT Code Details
Compare prices for sending money abroad
Wise never hides fees in the exchange rate. We give you the real rate, independently provided by Reuters. Compare our rate and fee with Western Union, ICICI Bank, WorldRemit and more, and see the difference for yourself.
Cheapest
We’re on a mission to bring transparency to finance, for people without borders. We charge as little as possible, and we always show you upfront. No hidden fees. No bad exchange rates. No surprises. How do we collect this data?
Always confirm the details with your recipient
When sending or receiving money, always check the SWIFT code with your recipient or bank.
If you think you’ve used the wrong SWIFT code to send money, you should get in contact with your bank right away. They may be able to cancel the transaction. If it’s too late to cancel, you might have to contact the recipient yourself and request that they return your money.
Last database update: May 2022
What is a SWIFT Code?
A SWIFT Code is a standard format of Bank Identifier Code (BIC) used to specify a particular bank or branch. These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international wire transfers. Banks also use these codes for exchanging messages between them.
SWIFT codes comprise of 8 or 11 characters. All 11 digit codes refer to specific branches, while 8 digit codes (or those ending in ‘XXX’) refer to the head or primary office. SWIFT codes are formatted as follows:
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive money using your bank, you might lose out on a bad exchange rate and pay hidden fees as a result. That’s because the banks still use an old system to exchange money. We recommend you use Wise (formerly TransferWise), which is usually much cheaper. With their smart technology:
The registrations of SWIFT codes are handled by Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) and their headquarters is located in La Hulpe, Belgium. SWIFT is the registered trademark of S.W.I.F.T. SCRL with a registered address at Avenue Adèle 1, B-1310 La Hulpe, Belgium.
TheSwiftCodes.com is owned by Wise Payments Ltd. («We», «Us»), a company incorporated under the laws of England and Wales with company number 07209813.
Are you overpaying on bank transfer fees?
When you send or receive money using your bank, you’ll often be charged an additional fee hidden behind a bad exchange rate.
Millions of people have saved money with Wise – you could too! By sending and receiving with Wise (formerly TransferWise) you’ll get the real exchange rate every time, and a free first transfer up to £500.
A SWIFT code (or BIC code) is a unique code that identifies financial and non-financial institutions and is mainly used for international wire transfers between banks.
In this page you will find detailed information about the swift code “DENITRIS917” of “DENIZBANK A.S.” for the branch named: “(DENIZLI BRANCH)”.
Institution | DENIZBANK A.S. |
---|---|
Branch name | (DENIZLI BRANCH) |
Branch code | 917 |
Alternative options | Sending money via your bank can be expensive because of markups they add to the exchange rate. You may want to consider alternatives like Wise, formerly TransferWise, who are up to 5x cheaper than banks for sending and receiving money abroad. |
The downside of international transfers with your bank
When you send or receive an international wire with your bank, you might lose money on a bad exchange rate. With Wise, formerly TransferWise, your money is always converted at the mid-market rate and you’ll be charged a low, upfront fee each time. Wise also offer a multi-currency account that allows customers to receive payments in multiple currencies for free and hold over 50 currencies in the one account. Learn more
SWIFT code
DENITRIS917 Click to copy it
SWIFT code
(8 characters)
DENITRIS Click to copy it
Branch code: 917
Institution’s 4-letter code: DENI
Country code: TR
Location code: IS
What is a SWIFT code?
SWIFT codes are used to identify banks and financial institutions worldwide. They are used by the swift network to transmit wire transfers (money transactions) and messages between them. For international wire transfers, swift codes are always required in order to make transactions secure and fast.
These codes were initially introduced by the SWIFT organization as “swift codes” but were later standardized by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) as “BIC” meaning “Business Identifier Codes”. Most people think B.I.C. stands for “Bank Identifier Codes” (“bank” instead of “business”) but that is incorrect since non-financial institutions can also join the swift network.
A “BIC code” can be seen by many different names, like “SWIFT code” (most common), “SWIFT ID”, “SWIFT-BIC”, “SWIFT address”, “BEI” (that comes from “Business Entity Identifier”), or even “ISO 9362”, which is the standard format that has been approved by the ISO organization. The acronym SWIFT stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
In depth analysis of a swift code
Swift codes are broken down into sections, in the same way telephone numbers are broken into sections, and every section reveals some information about the institution that was assigned this code. They consist of eight or eleven characters. Whenever an eight-character code is used, then it is referring to the headquarters (main office) of the institution.Here is how an 11-character code is broken down and what each section of characters represents. Let’s take this imaginary 11-character swift code:
AAAABBCCDDD
Section 1 (the first 4-characters “AAAA”): This code is used to identify the institution’s global presence (all branches and all divisions around the world). For example, “CHAS” is used for “JPMORGAN CHASE BANK”
Section 2 (5th and 6th characters “BB”): This two-letter code represents the country of this particular institution’s branch and follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard for representing country codes. For example, “US” for “UNITED STATES”, “GB” for “UNITED KINGDOM”, CA for “CANADA”, etc.
Section 3 (7th and 8th characters “CC”): These characters represent a location code (e.g. “FF” is the code for “Frankfurt”, “KK” is the code for Copenhagen, etc.) and also the second character (8th in the B.I.C.) sometimes carries this information:
Section 4 (9th to 11th characters “DDD”): These final three characters form a “branch code” that refers to the particular branch of the institution. If this section is omitted, then we have an 8-character swift code that is assumed to refer to the HEAD OFFICE of the institution. Also, a typical naming convention is that in the case we are referring to the main offices of an institution, this branch code is “XXX”.
Some popular swift code searches:
Try our online SWIFT/BIC lookup tool to locate any of the thousands active or passive swift codes. Our primary focus is to provide you with the most accurate and up to date database of financial institutions all over the world. You can search for an institution’s detailed data by entity name, BIC, or even specific keywords that narrow the search results even more. You can also browse for swift codes by clicking on the list of countries and then choosing the institution’s name from the alphabetical list.
We are certain that this site will help you save a lot of time (hence. money!), especially if you are dealing with lots of bank transactions daily. Please read our disclaimer at the bottom of this page before using our online tool.
Источники:
- http://www.theswiftcodes.com/ru/turkey/denitris/
- http://wise.com/ru/swift-codes/DENITRIS340
- http://www.bank-codes.com/turkey/branches-of-denizbank-a-s
- http://wise.com/gb/swift-codes/DENITRIS134
- http://www.bank-codes.com/denizbank-a-s-swift-code-DENITRISXXX-bic-code
- http://www.theswiftcodes.com/ru/turkey/denitris915/
- http://www.theswiftcodes.com/ru/turkey/denitris340/
- http://www.theswiftcodes.com/ru/turkey/denitris134/
- http://www.bank-codes.com/denizbank-a-s-swift-code-DENITRIS291-bic-code
- http://bank-codes.ru/swift-code/turkey/denitris/
- http://www.bank-codes.com/denizbank-a-s-swift-code-DENITRIS916-bic-code
- http://www.theswiftcodes.com/germany/esbkdeff/
- http://wise.com/ru/swift-codes/IKBARUMMXXX
- http://www.bank-codes.com/denizbank-a-s-swift-code-DENITRIS932-bic-code
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- http://wise.com/ru/swift-codes/ESBKATWWXXX
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- http://wise.com/us/swift-codes/DENITRIS915
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- http://bank-codes.ru/swift-code/turkey/denitris134/
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- http://wise.com/ru/swift-codes/DENITRIS915
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- http://bankstoday.net/last-articles/spisok-bankof-rf-so-swift
- http://www.theswiftcodes.com/turkey/denitris915/
- http://wise.com/us/swift-codes/DENITRIS134
- http://www.theswiftcodes.com/turkey/denitris134/
- http://www.bank-codes.com/denizbank-a-s-swift-code-DENITRIS917-bic-code