Live conversion with rates from the European Central Bank
The Chinese Yuan to US Dollar exchange rate is the most watched currency pair in Asia-Pacific trade. It affects everything from import prices at Walmart to your salary if you're an expat working in China.
Over the past year, USD/CNY has traded in a range of roughly 7.0 to 7.3. The People's Bank of China manages the rate within a daily trading band, so you won't see wild swings like with emerging market currencies — but the trend direction matters a lot.
China has strict capital controls. Individuals can purchase up to $50,000 worth of foreign currency per year. If you need to send more, you'll need documentation like tuition bills or medical expenses. Wise and traditional banks both work, but Wise usually gives you a better rate with lower fees.
There's no perfect time, but here's what to watch: when the PBOC cuts interest rates while the Fed holds steady, CNY tends to weaken (you get fewer dollars per yuan). When China's trade surplus widens, CNY often strengthens. Pay attention to quarterly economic data releases if you're moving large amounts.
The Euro to Yuan rate reflects the economic relationship between the EU and China — the world's second-largest trading partner pair. Whether you're a German company buying from Shenzhen or a French expat working in Shanghai, this rate hits your bottom line.
The ECB's monetary policy decisions and China's economic growth rate are the two biggest drivers. When the ECB cuts rates while China holds, CNY tends to strengthen against EUR.
The same $50,000 annual foreign exchange limit applies. For business transfers, you'll need trade documentation. Transfer services like Wise and Revolut are popular for personal remittances — they typically beat bank rates by 1-3%.
The Chinese Yuan (CNY, also known as Renminbi or RMB) is the official currency of the People's Republic of China. The exchange rate is managed by the People's Bank of China within a daily trading band against a basket of currencies.
CNY is the ISO 4217 currency code used in foreign exchange markets. RMB (Renminbi, meaning "people's currency") is the official name. Think of it like GBP (the code) vs pound sterling (the name). When you see exchange rates quoted, they'll always use CNY.
Always compare the rate you're offered against the mid-market rate (which is what this tool shows). Banks typically add a 1-3% markup. Online services like Wise are usually closer to the real rate. Avoid airport exchange counters — they're the worst rate you'll find anywhere.