If you’re a freelancer in Nigeria earning from international clients, the difference between getting paid through traditional banks vs Wise can be $500-2,000+ per year in saved fees. This guide walks you through the entire setup — from account creation to your first withdrawal to GTBank.
Why Nigerian freelancers need Wise in 2026
Traditional banks in Nigeria charge 3-7% hidden in the exchange rate when converting USD to NGN. On a modest $1,000 monthly freelance income, that’s $360-840 lost per year to currency spread alone.
Wise uses the real mid-market rate — the same rate you see on Google when you search “USD to NGN”. There’s a small transparent fee (typically 0.4-1%), but the total cost is 5-10x cheaper than any bank.
Here’s what $500 looks like in real numbers for Nigerian freelancers:
- Traditional bank: ~$150 NGN arrives after fees and spread
- Wise: ~742,500 NGN arrives (1% fee)
💡 Quick action: If you’re already earning from Upwork or Fiverr, open a free Wise account and compare your next payment yourself. You’ll see the difference on the very first transfer.
Step 1: Open your Wise multi-currency account
Go to wise.com and click Register. You’ll need:
- Your passport or national ID
- Proof of address (utility bill, bank statement — not older than 3 months)
- A selfie for ID verification
- Your GTBank (or other local bank) account details
Verification typically takes 1-3 business days in Nigeria. Some users get approved in hours; others take a week if documents are unclear. Pro tip: photograph your ID on a plain background with good lighting — it speeds up approval.
Step 2: Get your USD account details
Once verified, go to Account → Get USD account details. Wise will give you:
- Routing number (9 digits)
- Account number (8-12 digits)
- Account type (Checking)
- Your name as holder
These are real US-based account details (held with Wise’s banking partners). You can give them to Upwork, Fiverr, Toptal, or any direct client just like a normal US bank account.
Step 3: Set up your first receive
For Upwork
Go to Settings → Billing Methods → Add Method → Direct to U.S. Bank (ACH). Paste your Wise USD routing + account numbers. Upwork will send a tiny verification deposit (~$0.50) within 2-3 days. Confirm it, and you’re set.
For Fiverr
Settings → Billing & Payments → Withdraw Methods → Bank Transfer → Select United States. Paste the same Wise USD details.
For direct clients
Simply share your USD routing + account numbers + the memo “Nigerian freelancer — [your name]”. They send a normal ACH transfer from their US bank — no fees on their side, no fees on yours (other than Wise’s standard conversion fee when you move to NGN).
Step 4: Convert USD to NGN
Log into Wise, select your USD balance, click Convert. You’ll see the real mid-market rate and the small conversion fee (typically 0.4-0.7%). For comparison:
| Method | Rate | Fee on $500 | You receive (approx) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wise | Real mid-market | ~$2-5 | 742,500 NGN |
| GTBank direct | Bank rate (3% spread) | None visible | ~727,500 NGN |
| Western Union | Worst rate + fee | $10-25 | ~697,500 NGN |
💡 Pro tip: Wise lets you set up rate alerts — wait for a favorable USD/NGN rate, then convert. Over a year, this can add 2-3% to your effective earnings.
Step 5: Withdraw to GTBank
After conversion, click Send → Choose your GTBank account (add it once, saved forever) → Enter amount → Confirm. Transfer typically arrives in 1-2 business hours for same-bank recipients, 1 business day for other banks in Nigeria.
From GTBank, you can then use NIBSS to pay for anything locally.
Real-world savings calculation
Let’s say you earn $2,000/month from Upwork (roughly the median for active Nigerian freelancers with 1-2 years experience):
- Bank spread cost (3% avg): $60/month = $720/year
- Wise total cost (0.6% avg): $12/month = $144/year
- Your savings: $576/year
That’s more than a month of rent in Lagos or a new laptop — just by switching payment method.
Common mistakes to avoid
1. Using Wise just as a “forwarding” account. Wise multi-currency balance holds USD indefinitely. You don’t have to convert immediately — wait for better rates or keep USD for USD expenses.
2. Forgetting to add your name on transfers. Some banks flag transfers without matching sender names. Always include your full legal name in the memo.
3. Ignoring SCA (security) setup. Enable 2FA with authenticator app (not SMS) — Wise supports Google Authenticator, Authy, and hardware keys.
4. Not linking additional cards. Wise also offers a debit card — useful for international purchases at real rates. Order it from the app after verification.
Is Wise worth it over [Alternative]?
For most Nigerian freelancers: yes. Alternatives like Airwallex work well for businesses with teams, but for solo freelancers, Wise wins on:
- Lower minimum balance (none vs $100+)
- Simpler onboarding (7 days vs 30+ days)
- Better NGN delivery speed (1-2 days vs 2-5 days)
Airwallex is our recommendation if you run a small agency with multiple team members and need corporate features. For most individual freelancers: start with Wise.
Final verdict
If you’re earning in USD and paying in NGN, Wise saves you hundreds of dollars per year in unnecessary bank fees. Setup takes 30-60 minutes end-to-end. Your first transfer usually completes within 2 business days of account approval.
Next steps:
- Register for Wise (free, no credit card needed)
- Upload ID + address proof
- Wait 1-3 days for verification
- Copy USD details to Upwork/Fiverr/client
- Convert and withdraw to GTBank
Updated April 2026 by Chidi Okonkwo.
Sources & further reading
For more depth on these topics, these authoritative sources are worth bookmarking:
- Wise Mission Mid-market rate — authoritative reference.
- World Bank Remittance Prices — authoritative reference.
- FATF Cross-Border Payments — authoritative reference.
Last verified April 2026.