Money Tips

Understanding buy vs sell rates (without the headache)

4 min readΒ·Updated 2026-06-01Β·By KL Rates Editorial

Every currency on a money changer's board shows two numbers. They look almost identical, which is exactly why they trip people up. Here's the plain-language version.

The two numbers are the changer's view, not yours

The board is written from the changer's side:

  • Buy rate β€” the rate at which the changer buys foreign currency from you.
  • Sell rate β€” the rate at which the changer sells foreign currency to you.

So you just flip it to your side:

  • Going on a trip and buying USD? You care about the sell rate β€” that's what you pay.
  • Back home with leftover USD to change back? You care about the buy rate β€” that's what you get.

The easy way to remember it

You pay the sell rate when you buy foreign cash. You get the buy rate when you sell it back. That's why this site shows "You Pay" and "You Get" instead of the raw board numbers.

A quick KL example

Say a changer posts USD at buy 4.40 / sell 4.48. To buy US$100 for your trip you'd pay RM448 (the sell rate). If you came home and changed that US$100 back, you'd receive RM440 (the buy rate).

The gap is the spread

That RM8 difference is the spread β€” the changer's margin. A tighter spread means a better deal, and on popular currencies the best KL changers keep it small. Comparing spreads across shops is the single easiest way to keep more ringgit in your pocket.

Check today's spreads side by side and see who's sharpest right now.

Live spread right now
just now
Best USD buy today
at KL Remit Exchange
4.090

Put the timing to work

See which KL changer has the sharpest rate right now β€” updated every 15 minutes.

Compare rates now β†’