Open a Tunisian Dinar Business Account
Open a TND business account and operate with confidence. Get a dedicated GB IBAN denominated in TND with access to domestic and international payment rails. Send, receive, and hold TND with clear control over every transaction.

What’s Included with Your Tunisian Dinar Business Account
A dedicated TND account embeds your operation into Tunisia’s payment ecosystem, reduces friction with local counterparties, and puts FX timing under treasury policy.

Key Benefits
Collect revenues in TND without forced conversion into another base currency.
Pay suppliers and counterparties in their preferred currency.
Align FX execution with treasury policy and market timing.
Build credibility and trust with Tunisian and global counterparties.
The Risk of Not Having a Tunisian Dinar Business Account
Managing TND activity only through foreign-currency accounts or ad-hoc conversions creates unnecessary cost, delays, and compliance challenges. Without a dedicated TND account, local settlement becomes slower and less predictable.
FX erosion:
Repeated, unplanned conversions compress margins.
Payment delays:
SWIFT-only routes add intermediaries, days, and fees.
Counterparty friction:
Local partners prefer TND transfers to domestic accounts.
Compliance hurdles:
Paying taxes and payroll without TND can be challenging.

Our TND Business Accounts Are Designed for
We support a wide range of internationally minded businesses. From fast-growing companies expanding into Tunisia to established global organisations managing complex operations.

Global Corporates
Centralise TND receivables, fund suppliers and payroll, and align TND costs with TND revenues for cleaner margins.
Funds & Institutions
Manage capital calls and distributions in TND with role-based approvals and clear audit trails.
Private Equity
Efficient TND flows for deals, fees, and SPV/holdco structures with policy-driven FX.
Family Offices
Discreet TND management for assets, commitments, and inter-entity transfers under tight permissions.
Banq Global vs. Traditional Providers
How to Open a Tunisian Dinar Business Account
A clear, expert-led process that reduces rework, shortens decision time, and maintains certainty.
Scoping & Fit
We review your structure, directors, UBOs, and TND flows to confirm feasibility and align the account with your treasury needs.
Document Pack
A precise, tailored checklist for your entity type and structure, minimising rounds of clarification.
Compliance Review
Disciplined AML/KYC due diligence with prompt Q&A and clear status visibility.
Account Issuance
TND capability is issued with a pooled GB IBAN denominated in TND.
Go-Live & Controls
Users, roles, approvals, payment templates, and FX policy (including market orders) configured to your standards.
Tunisian Dinar Business Account - FAQs
Opening a TND account raises questions on eligibility, payment rails, non-resident onboarding, and compliance. Below are answers to the questions global finance teams ask most often.
Do we need to have a company registered in Tunisia to open a TND account?
No, a company registered in Tunisia is not required in order to open a TND account.
Will the account be opened under our company name with unique account details?
Yes, you receive a TND account in your company's name with a unique IBAN and BIC.
Can we open a TND account remotely?
Yes, Banq Global supports remote onboarding, without requiring directors to physically visit Tunisia.
What payment rails are supported?
TND payments are supported via SWIFT for secure international transfers.
How does holding TND help with FX costs?
Maintaining TND balances allows you to avoid repeated conversions, match costs with revenues, and time FX strategically under treasury policy.
Can we manage multiple entities and approvals in one place?
Yes, you can administer access per entity, set role-based approvals, implement payment approval workflows, and maintain complete audit trails.
Do you accommodate layered ownership (holding companies, SPVs, trusts)?
Yes, we regularly onboard clients with layered ownership structures such as holding companies, SPVs, and trusts, including cross-border arrangements.