Send money from Lithuania to Bahrain at the best rates. Compare fees, exchange rates, and welcome offers to find the fastest and most cost-effective service.
Recipient receives
NaNBHD
Exchange rate
1 EUR = 0.4298 BHD
Fees
Free
3.00 EUR
Total to pay
NaN EUR
Use code "VVME-V58N" to get 20 EUR for your first transfer
Yes, all providers listed on RemitLens are licensed and regulated financial services. They use bank-level encryption and security measures to protect your money and personal information. Look for the 'Verified' badge on each provider.
Fees include transfer fees (flat or percentage-based), exchange rate margins, and sometimes receiving fees. Our comparison shows the total cost including all fees, so you know exactly what you'll pay and what your recipient will receive.
Yes, each provider sets its own per-transfer and annual sending limits, which depend on your verification level, the destination country's regulations, and anti-money-laundering rules in Lithuania. For most retail transfers under β¬/$2,000 the limits will not be a concern; larger amounts may require additional ID verification.
The conversion of 100 EUR into BHD depends on the provider you choose β each applies a slightly different exchange rate margin on top of the mid-market rate. Our comparison shows you the exact BHD amount your recipient will receive after fees, so you can pick the provider that gives the best value today.
Many corridors now support direct delivery to mobile wallets in Bahrain β depending on the country, these include M-Pesa, MTN MoMo, Orange Money, GCash, bKash, Easypaisa, or Wave. Mobile wallet payouts are typically instant and often cheaper than cash pickup, so check the payout options listed in our comparison.
Today's best rate from Lithuania to Bahrain is 0.4298 BHD per EUR with Ria β plus a 20 EUR welcome bonus on your first transfer.
Middle Eastern corridors split into two patterns: GCC countries (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman) act primarily as senders, while Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen receive. Lebanon's banking crisis means most providers now route USD cash via OMT or BoB Finance; Egypt favours CIB and NBE bank accounts.