You didn’t spend weeks setting up a US LLC just to hit a wall opening a bank account. If you’re comparing Mercury and Wise right now, you’ve probably already finished the paperwork and just want a straight answer – which one will actually work for you, not which one has the nicer landing page.
Most comparison pages list features and call it done. They skip the question that should come first: can you even open the account you’re looking at? We’re starting there. Fees, currencies, features – all of that’s coming too. But we’re also going to say something most articles leave out entirely: platform eligibility for founders based in Pakistan, and for Non-Resident Pakistanis running a US LLC from somewhere else.
Here’s the short version, for anyone short on time.
You’re a US resident, or from a country Mercury currently supports, and what you want is a free US bank account built with startups in mind – decent software, no monthly fee to get going.
Multi-currency accounts matter to you, you want FX fees you can see coming instead of finding out later, and you’re operating as a founder outside the US – including most Pakistan-based founders, since Mercury doesn’t currently support account holders residing in Pakistan.
One thing worth saying plainly, up front: Mercury does not currently open accounts for founders residing in Pakistan. We’ll unpack what that means below, and what NRPs specifically need to know.
| Dimension | Mercury | Wise Business |
|---|---|---|
| Account type | US business bank account | Multi-currency business account (fintech, not a traditional bank) |
| Base monthly fee | $0 | $0 (usage-based pricing) |
| Paid tier pricing | Starts at $29.90/month for premium tiers | No tiered plans, pay-as-you-go |
| Setup fee | None | One-time $31 |
| FX/conversion fee | Not applicable for USD wires (free) | Around 0.57% on currency conversion |
| Supported currencies | Primarily USD | 40+ currencies |
| Incoming/outgoing wire fees | Free USD wires | Fees vary by currency and route |
| Non-US resident eligibility | Limited, country-restricted | Broader access for international founders |
| Pakistan-based founder eligibility | Not currently supportedNot available | Generally accessibleAccessible |
| Multi-currency accounts | Limited | Yes, core feature |
| Receiving US client payments | Very easy, native USD | Easy, with conversion if needed |
| Software/mobile experience | Strong, startup-focused | Strong, built for cross-border use |
Fees and eligibility rules move around more than people expect. Before applying anywhere, confirm current terms directly on Mercury’s or Wise’s website. What’s above is accurate as of when this was written, not a promise of what you’ll see the moment you sign up.
Not sure which row applies to you? The eligibility section further down breaks it down properly.
See Pakistan & NRP EligibilityA lot of comparison articles get this wrong. They set it up as a head-to-head fight, crown a winner, and move on. Truth is, Mercury and Wise were never built to do the same job.
If your business runs mostly on dollars, Mercury fits about as well as you’d expect. If your operation stretches across more than one country, Wise does a job Mercury wasn’t really designed for.
Let’s get specific, because “it depends” doesn’t help much when you’re the one running the business.
Mercury charges nothing to open a basic account, and USD wires cost nothing either. If your business mostly bills US clients in dollars and just keeps the money sitting in dollars, Mercury’s cost structure is hard to argue with – there’s barely anything to pay for.
Wise works differently. A one-time $31 setup fee gets you in, and after that you’re paying based on usage, mostly that roughly 0.57% conversion fee whenever money moves between currencies.
Here’s a real scenario. Say $10,000 a month is coming in from US clients. If it stays in USD the whole way through, Mercury’s free wires mean nothing gets eaten by fees. But once part of that needs converting into PKR, EUR, or GBP, to pay yourself or a contractor, Wise’s transparent rate tends to beat whatever a less upfront platform is quietly charging.
Mercury wins on pure USD movement. Wise takes over once conversion enters the picture.
Trying to work out your actual monthly cost based on how your payments actually flow?
This is where Wise pulls ahead, and not by a small margin. It covers over 40 currencies and lets you hold local currency balances in most of them, which matters more than it sounds once you’re actually running a cross-border business day to day.
Picture a software agency based in Lahore. They bill a New York client in USD, fine, but they’ve also got two developers on payroll, one in the Philippines, one in Poland, who need paying in their own local currencies every month. Route that through a US-only bank and you’re looking at multiple conversions, murky fees, and delays that add up. Route it through Wise instead, and you’re holding balances in several currencies, paying each contractor directly, without bouncing the money through conversions it didn’t need.
Mercury just isn’t built for that kind of setup. It handles USD extremely well. It was never meant to be a multi-currency hub, and it shows.
This is the part most comparison pages skip, or bury near the bottom where nobody scrolls. We’re putting it front and center because, honestly, it decides everything else on this page.
Mercury does not currently open accounts for founders residing in Pakistan. This isn’t a “a few people manage to sneak through” situation – it’s a country-level restriction, as of when this was written. If you’re physically based in Pakistan and running your US LLC from there, Mercury isn’t on the table right now, no matter how solid your business looks on paper.
Wise Business, on the other hand, is generally accessible to founders signing up from Pakistan. For most founders in this exact position, it ends up being the workable option – a functioning US-facing business account with multi-currency capability built in. Looking for a Mercury bank alternative for Pakistan? Wise is usually where people in this situation land.
This reflects publicly available eligibility information at the time of writing, not legal or immigration advice. Always confirm directly with the provider before deciding.
Wise, generally, is your workable primary option today. Mercury just isn’t accessible based on where you’re physically located, that’s not a reflection of your business or how it’s structured. Check Wise business account Pakistan requirements and you’ll likely find the process a lot more straightforward than most US-only banks manage.
Plenty of people assume the worst here without actually checking. Eligibility comes down to where you reside, not your nationality. A Pakistani citizen living in the UAE, the UK, or somewhere else entirely might not run into Mercury’s restriction at all. It’s about your country of residence, not what’s on your passport, so check your specific situation instead of assuming.
Not sure which category fits you, or which platform you’d genuinely qualify for? Our US LLC banking setup service helps global founders confirm eligibility properly and get set up right the first time, instead of guessing and hitting a wall halfway through an application.
Free USD banking, startup-grade tools, and none of the eligibility friction.
It’s the accessible option right now, and the multi-currency support holds up from day one.
Largely because of transparent conversion pricing once you’re regularly moving real money across currencies.
Run together. Eligible founders often keep Mercury for US banking and lean on Wise for everything international.
Still not sure where you land? Get a free banking assessment for your business and we’ll help map it out with you.
Neither platform is flawless, not even close. Each one handles a different problem well, and struggles a bit with the other’s job.
Here’s something a lot of global founders eventually figure out on their own: you don’t actually have to pick just one. A common setup, for founders eligible for both, looks something like this.
Mercury ends up as the primary US banking layer, handling client payments and anything that needs to look and function like a proper US business account.
Wise becomes the layer that moves money internationally, converts currencies without hiding the math, and pays out contractors or covers expenses outside the US.
If you’re somewhere Mercury currently doesn’t reach, this exact stack isn’t available to you yet, but that doesn’t mean you’re stuck. It usually makes more sense to build your operations primarily around Wise, and then look into alternative US banking options built specifically for founders in restricted countries. For more on that, see our guide on banking alternatives for founders in prohibited countries.
Want the full breakdown of how taxes and transfers actually work across a setup like this? Check out our guide on managing US LLC taxes and transfers across Mercury and Wise.
Plenty of founders pick a platform based on features, start the application, and only then run into a residency restriction that rules them out completely. Check eligibility before you fall for a feature list.
A platform can look perfect on paper and still be the wrong fit if client payments don’t clear smoothly, or if fees pile up in ways the marketing page conveniently left out.
These are two different situations with two different answers. Assuming the restriction applies to you just because you’re Pakistani, when you actually live somewhere else entirely, can lead you to rule out an option that was available to you the whole time.
A lot of founders never even consider the hybrid stack, and end up stuck with a single platform trying to do two jobs it was never equally built for.
Trying to avoid these mistakes in your own setup? Get guidance tailored to your situation before committing to either platform.
Not in the traditional sense, no. Wise is a fintech, technically an e-money institution rather than a chartered bank. It still gives you business accounts, multi-currency balances, and payment tools, but it sits under a different regulatory category than a traditional bank like the ones Mercury works with.
No. As of when this was written, Mercury doesn’t open accounts for founders residing in Pakistan, this comes down to its current prohibited-country policy. That can change down the line, so it’s worth confirming directly with Mercury before applying.
Wise, generally, mostly thanks to its transparent conversion pricing, around 0.57% on currency conversion. That said, it really comes down to your transfer volume and currency mix, so run your own numbers rather than assuming one side wins every time.
Yes, and a lot of eligible founders do exactly this. Mercury covers the US-based banking side, Wise handles international transfers and multi-currency needs. Our full guide on the hybrid workflow goes into more detail if you want it.
If you’re based somewhere Mercury doesn’t currently reach, Wise is generally the strongest place to start given how much broader its accessibility is. There are also other US LLC banking options for non-residents, built specifically for founders in restricted countries, and we’ve covered those in a dedicated guide on that topic.
Got a question this page didn’t answer? Talk to our team and we’ll help you work through it.
Here’s the honest version. This was never really a “which one is better” question. It’s a “which one actually fits your situation” question. Mercury works well for eligible, US-facing founders who mostly deal in dollars. Wise works well for global operators, Pakistan-based founders, and anyone juggling more than one currency on a regular basis. And for founders who qualify for both, running them together often turns out to be the stronger setup.
If there’s one thing that trips people up more than the platforms themselves, it’s confusion around eligibility and setup, not any real flaw in Mercury or Wise. Once that part is sorted, running either account day to day is fairly straightforward.
Figuring out eligibility and getting everything set up right on the first try can end up more confusing than it needs to be, especially from outside the US. That’s exactly where we come in.
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