Send money from Oman to Sri Lanka
A shortlist of providers verified to serve this route — instant bank credit, cash pickup and wallet payout — and exactly how the rupees reach Sri Lanka.
Our comparison engine doesn't price Oman-origin transfers yet. Instead, here's a shortlist of providers verified to move money on this corridor — confirm their live rate and fee on their own site before you send.
Indicative options · not a live quote
Sending money from Oman to Sri Lanka
Our live price comparison can't quote Oman-origin transfers yet, but money genuinely moves on this route every day — around 32,000 Sri Lankans work in Oman, mostly in domestic work, construction and hospitality. Their remittances feed a record flow home — Sri Lanka took in over US$8 billion in 2025 — and the central bank has steered money back through formal channels since the 2022 crisis. The providers below are verified to operate this corridor, and several pay straight to a bank account through the instant CEFTS network. Rates and fees are set by each provider and must be confirmed on their own site before you send.
| Provider | Payout method | Speed | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CEFTS bank, cash or wallet | Minutes (CEFTS/cash) to same day | Visit site | |
| Bank, wallet or cash pickup | Minutes (cash) to same day | Visit site | |
| Bank deposit (LKR) | Minutes to a day | Visit site | |
| Bank, wallet or cash pickup | Minutes (cash) to same day | Visit site | |
| Bank deposit (KFH Tahweel) | Same day | Visit site | |
| CEFTS bank, wallet or cash pickup | Minutes to same day | Visit site |
Most money sent from Oman to Sri Lanka lands straight in a Sri Lankan bank account — often within minutes through CEFTS, the LankaPay instant network that links every major bank (Bank of Ceylon, Commercial Bank, Sampath, Hatton National). A bank deposit needs the recipient's name, bank, branch and account number — Sri Lanka doesn't use IBANs. Money can also be collected as cash at bank and exchange counters, or sent to a mobile wallet. The headline fee is only part of the picture — what really decides the cost is the margin added to the exchange rate, so always compare the rupees that actually arrive, not just the upfront fee.
Why Oman to Sri Lanka shows no live prices yet
Currency Expert's live comparison engine prices transfers that start in the UK and a handful of other major sending countries, where the providers we connect to operate. None of those providers currently quote transfers that start in Oman, so the route comes back empty even though real services move hundreds of millions of dollars on it every year.
Until we can pull live Oman rates, this page lists providers verified to serve the corridor rather than a live price table. Treat the page as a shortlist, not a quote — and always confirm the rate and fee on the provider's own site before you commit.
How the money reaches Sri Lanka
You have plenty of choice on this route. The fastest bank option is CEFTS, the LankaPay instant network that connects every major Sri Lankan bank — a credit usually lands within minutes. A bank deposit needs the recipient's name, bank, branch and account number (Sri Lanka doesn't use IBANs). Money can also be collected as cash at partner bank and exchange counters, or paid into a mobile wallet.
CEFTS credits and cash payouts are usually the fastest, landing within minutes; a traditional SWIFT bank transfer can take one to three business days depending on the receiving bank.
What sending money to Sri Lanka really costs
The headline fee is only part of the cost. On any transfer, the bigger number is usually hidden inside the exchange rate — so it's worth knowing where each slice goes before you send.
The exchange-rate margin
The gap between the real mid-market rate and the rate you're offered. On the rial-to-rupee route this is where most of the cost hides, and it varies between providers, so it genuinely pays to compare the rupees that actually arrive rather than just the headline fee. The sharpest digital services sit at the low end; some counters charge more.
Use formal channels post-crisis
During the 2022 financial crisis, an informal undiyal market offered better-than-official rates and drew money away from the banks. The central bank has since worked to bring flows back through licensed channels, and formal providers now offer competitive rates with none of the legal risk — a licensed provider paying through CEFTS is both safe and good value.
5% VAT on the fee
Oman applies 5% VAT, which can be charged on a provider's service fee — not on the money you send — so where it applies it's a small amount on the fee itself. Sri Lanka doesn't tax the money you receive from family either — the main cost to watch is still the exchange-rate margin, not the headline fee.
Tax and rules on each side
Sending from Oman
Oman charges no personal income tax and has no exchange controls, so you can send money abroad freely as family support or a gift — there's no gift tax and no reporting threshold on electronic transfers. You'll need a valid Omani Resident Card to remit, and licensed exchange houses run standard identity checks under the Central Bank of Oman. For a larger transfer the provider may ask for proof of your source of funds under Central Bank of Oman rules.
Receiving in Sri Lanka
Family remittances received through normal banking channels are not taxed in Sri Lanka — money sent home for support isn't treated as taxable income for the recipient, and funds that arrive this way count as a clean, documented inflow. Informal undiyal or hawala routes lose that protection and are discouraged by the central bank, so always use a licensed provider.
Funding your transfer without overpaying
Paying from an Omani bank account or a debit card is usually the cheapest way to fund a transfer. Funding with a credit card is often treated by the card issuer as a cash advance, which can trigger a one-off fee and interest from day one with no grace period — quietly making a cheap-looking transfer expensive. Check how your card treats the payment before you use it, and have your Omani Resident Card to hand for the identity check.
Scams to watch on this route
Most traps target the recipient with a fake message or a fake windfall. These few rules are worth passing on to whoever you're sending to.
The bank / wallet "verification" scam
Rule: to receive money into a bank account or wallet you never share your PIN, password or a one-time code. Anyone calling or texting "from the bank" asking for your OTP is a fraudster — never share it.
The undiyal "better rate" lure
Rule: a stranger offering a better-than-bank rate through an informal undiyal channel has no recourse if the money vanishes, and it's discouraged by the central bank. Since the crisis, licensed providers give a fair rate — use them, not a middleman.
Fake prize / benefit texts
Rule: never pay a "fee" or "tax" to release a prize, benefit or windfall you didn't apply for. Genuine money never requires you to pay first to receive it.
Confirm before you send
Rule: check the recipient's name, bank and account number against details they sent you in writing, and use a licensed provider rather than a stranger offering a "better rate" off-platform.
How most people send money from Oman to Sri Lanka
For most people sending money from Oman to Sri Lanka, the simplest route is a verified provider paying straight into the recipient's bank account through CEFTS, or cash for collection — fast, familiar and easy to receive. Because we can't show a live quote here yet, treat this page as a vetted shortlist — then judge each option by the rupees that actually arrive after the rate margin, and confirm the recipient's bank and account number before you send.
Oman to Sri Lanka transfers: frequently asked questions
Our live comparison engine prices transfers that start in the UK and a few other major sending countries. It doesn't yet quote transfers that start in Oman, so instead of an empty table we list providers verified to serve the corridor. Confirm the live rate and fee on each provider's own site before you send.
Yes. Several providers on this route pay straight into a bank account through CEFTS, the LankaPay instant network that connects every major Sri Lankan bank, usually within minutes. You need the recipient's name, bank, branch and account number — Sri Lanka doesn't use IBANs.
For a bank deposit, the recipient's full name as on their bank records, the bank and branch, and the account number — Sri Lanka doesn't use the IBAN system. For cash pickup, their full name as on their NIC plus a reference number. For a wallet, their registered phone number. You'll also need your own valid Omani Resident Card to send.
CEFTS bank credits and cash pickup are usually available within minutes. A traditional SWIFT bank transfer can take from a few hours up to one to three business days, depending on the receiving bank. The provider will show an estimated delivery time before you confirm.
There's no fixed cap on personal family remittances from Oman, which has no exchange controls. For a larger transfer the provider may ask for proof of your source of funds under Central Bank of Oman anti-money-laundering rules, so keep your Omani Resident Card and, for bigger amounts, a bank statement to hand.
No. Family remittances received through normal banking channels are not taxed in Sri Lanka — money sent home for support isn't treated as taxable income for the recipient, and it counts as a clean, documented inflow. Oman also charges no tax on the amount you send abroad. Only use licensed channels — informal undiyal routes lose that protection and are discouraged by the central bank.
Paying from an Omani bank account or a debit card is usually cheapest. Avoid funding with a credit card where you can, since issuers often treat it as a cash advance, adding a one-off fee and interest from day one. And always compare the exchange-rate margin, not just the upfront fee.
Our sources & how we keep this current
Last reviewed: 1 July 2026. We re-check the providers and rules on this corridor regularly, and will switch this page to a live price table as soon as our engine can quote Oman-origin transfers.
Affiliate disclosure: the "Visit site" links to some providers are affiliate links. Currency Expert may earn a commission, at no cost to you, if you open an account through them. It never changes which providers we list or the order they appear in.