Euro to US Dollar — EUR to USD
EUR to USD Converter
EUR/USD Rate — Last 30 Days
EUR dipped 0.66% this week — minor weakness, within normal market noise.
The 7-day average rate is below the 30-day average — recent momentum favors USD strengthening vs EUR. The trend may continue until a catalyst (rate decision, economic data) reverses it.
The rate is in the bottom 20% of its 30-day range — bearish short-term positioning. Watch if it holds support or breaks to a new low.
RSI of 24 means EUR has fallen fast relative to USD and may be oversold. RSI below 30 often precedes a bounce — but in a strong downtrend, the rate can stay oversold for weeks.
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Rate Statistics
| Period | High | Low | Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 days | 1.1468 | 1.1353 | 1.1409 |
| 30 days | 1.1775 | 1.1353 | 1.1624 |
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Historical EUR/USD Rates by Year
What drives the EUR/USD rate?
Whether you're converting euros for a US trip, receiving USD payments in Europe, or following global macro trends, here's what moves the Euro to US Dollar rate. The EUR/USD is the world's most traded currency pair. It is primarily driven by interest rate differentials between the European Central Bank (ECB) and the US Federal Reserve. Economic data from both regions — inflation, employment, GDP growth — moves this pair significantly. Political events in the Eurozone, particularly in Germany, France, and Italy, also affect EUR strength.
How to get the best EUR to USD rate
The rate shown above is the interbank mid-market rate — the real exchange rate used between financial institutions. Individual customers cannot access this rate directly. Banks typically add a 2–3% spread on top, meaning you receive significantly less than the rate shown.
Online transfer services like Wise offer rates very close to the interbank rate with a small transparent fee of 0.5–1%. On a $1,000 EUR exchange this typically saves $15–25 compared to a bank. Airport exchange booths charge the highest fees — often 5–8% above the interbank rate — and should be avoided for large amounts.