Chase Routing Number

Using a Chase account in the US to send or receive a domestic or international wire transfer? Make sure your payment arrives by using the right routing number.

Find a Routing Number

Search for a bank name or enter a routing number to check it is valid.

Chase routing numbers for wire transfers

The domestic and international wire transfer routing number for Chase is 021000021.

If you're sending an international wire transfer, you’ll also need the Chase swift code.

Type of wire transferChase routing number
Domestic Wire Transfer021000021
International Wire Transfer to Chase account in the USA021000021
SWIFT CodeCHASUS33
  • 2.49 USD
  • 3.77 USDOur fee
  • 6.26 USDTotal fees
  • =
    993.74 USDTotal amount we’ll convert
  • ×
    0.9527

See if you can save when sending money to the US.

International payments can be expensive and slow. With many providers hiding fees in their exchange rate.

Check how much an international transfer costs with Wise using our calculator.

We use the mid-market rate and show fees upfront, so you’ll know exactly how much it’ll cost before you hit send.

Wise supports international money transfers to 160 countries in 40 currencies.

Other Chase routing numbers

Browse other Chase routing numbers for Chase.

Where is a routing number on a check?

Your Chase routing number can be found at the bottom left corner of a check. Here’s how to find your routing number and account number on any check issued by your bank.
Routing number on a check
Routing number online

How to find your Chase routing number online

Here are some of the ways to find your number online:
  1. On this website – We've listed routing numbers for some of the biggest banks in the US.
  2. Online banking – You’ll be able to get your bank's routing number by logging into online banking.
  3. Check or statement – bank-issued check or bank statement.
  4. Fedwire – You can look up your routing number on the official website of the Federal Reserve.
To make sure the bank can process your payment securely and quickly, you should always check routing numbers – including numbers on this page – with your bank or your recipient.

Routing numbers, SWIFT codes, BIC and IBANs – what’s the difference?

You’ll need a few details to send or receive a wire transfer – either here in the US or internationally.
Routing numbers help identify banks when processing domestic ACH payments or wire transfers. But only in the United States. You don't need one to make a payment to your friend in France, for example.
SWIFT codes, like routing numbers, also identify banks and financial institutions. This time for international payments. They're sometimes known as BIC codes (Bank Identification Codes)
IBANs (international bank account numbers) identify individual bank accounts. They're issued by many banks in Europe, but banks elsewhere in the world are starting to adopt them as well.