How Do I Get Paid (Methods of Payment)                           

Hungary’s EU-harmonizing reforms have created a financial environment where virtually all capital-related institutions, products, and services can be found. The Hungarian Forint has been fully convertible for all financial transactions since 2001, and both the Hungarian financial market and capital market transactions are fully liberalized.
 
The National Bank of Hungary (MNB) is the central bank and a member of the European System of Central Banks (ESCB). The MNB and the members of its decision-making bodies perform their duties and carry out their obligations independently from the government. With the exception of the European Central Bank, the MNB (and the members of its decision-making bodies) may not ask for or follow instructions from the government, the institutions and bodies of the European Union, the governments of other EU Member States or any other institution or body.
 
According to Act CCXXXVII of 2013 on Credit Institutions and Financial Enterprises (Financial Enterprises Act), credit institutions are financial institutions which collect deposits and provide credit lines and loans, and perform other financial services. A commercial bank may only operate in Hungary as a company limited by shares (Rt.) or as a branch office of a foreign bank. In the case of a branch office of a foreign bank, a license for banking activities issued by its foreign authority is also required.  The Financial Enterprises Act determines the range of financial services that commercial banks may provide.
 
In Hungary, foreigners may only perform financial services in one of two ways: by establishing a company limited by shares and registered in Hungary, or by founding a registered branch office. Banks - including the branch office of foreign credit institutions - may be founded with a minimum of HUF 2 billion (about $7 million) in initial capital. A foreign registered credit institution may also establish bank representation, but may not perform any kind of business activity.
 
Since Hungary's accession to the European Union, credit institutions registered in another Member State of the EU may engage in cross-border services.
 
Financial institutions whose controlling interest is owned by foreign professional investors constitute more than 90% of the registered capital of the sector including 35 commercial banks (see their list on the website of the Hungarian Banking Association –
http://www.bankszovetseg.hu/tagjaink.cshtml?lang=eng. The Hungarian Development Bank – a bank offering favorable credit facilities to Hungarian businesses implementing economic development projects - and Eximbank – a bank serving Hungarian exporters by providing them effective financing and insurance facilities - have been owned by the state ever since their founding. In 2014, MKB and Budapest Bank became state property, increasing state-ownership to more than 50% of the banking sector in Hungary.   Although foreign investors had controlled 80% of the banking sector in Hungary, this dropped significantly in 2015 down to 45.8%. The dominance of foreign ownership has been crucial in upgrading the formerly one-level banking sector to a double-level one which meets international standards. The U.S. exporter should be aware that access to capital in Hungary is still difficult and limited, compelling many Hungarian SMEs to depend on self- financing, including payments for imports. For this reason, exporters tend to offer 60-day or even 90-day payment terms to their Hungarian customers only after establishing a track record for payments.
 
A banking account at a commercial bank is required to register and run a company in Hungary. Wire transfers are used for more than 80% of payment transactions, and new customers are sometimes required to pay in advance. A letter of credit is often used for more significant and high-value first transactions before mutual trust develops between partners. Credit cards are also used but mostly for individual purchases. The largest commercial banks in Hungary are: OTP - Hungarian Savings Bank, Hungarian Foreign Trade Bank (MKB), Citibank, Commercial and Credit Bank (K&H), Budapest Bank, UniCredit Bank, CIB Bank. They are all members of the Hungarian Banking Association.
 
The largest debt collection firms, company rating and credit management agencies in Hungary are:
 
Dun & Bradstreet: http://www.dbhun.hu/en Intrum Justitia: http://www.intrum.hu Creditexpress: http://www.creditexpress.hu
Sigma Collection: http://www.sigma.hu/flash/indexa.htm
Coface Intercredit: http://www.coface.hu/ Euler Hermes: http://www.eulerhermes.hu
 
EU REGULATIONS:
 
https://www.export.gov/article?id=European-Union-Methods-of-Payment
 

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