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Selling Tickets in Another Currency

Updated over 3 weeks ago

Want to host events abroad or reach international audiences? While Posh currently supports one currency per organization, there are still easy ways to sell globally!

🌎 Current Setup

Each Posh organization is linked to a single country and currency through its Stripe account — so you can’t switch currencies for individual events.

💡 Your Options:

Option 1: Sell in your home currency

You can sell tickets in your default currency (e.g., USD), even if your event is abroad.

Example: A U.S. organizer hosting an event in Mexico can still sell in USD.

Option 2: Create a new organization for another currency

If you have a foreign bank account, create a new Posh organization and connect a new Stripe account for that currency.

Example: Have a EUR account? Create a new org to sell in EUR.
📘 Follow this guide: Creating a New Organization

Once you’ve created your new organization, you’ll set up your payouts in EUR through Stripe.


Setting Up EUR Payouts

To complete your setup, you’ll need:

  • A EUR bank account that can receive SEPA transfers

  • Your existing U.S. business documents

  • A valid ID for verification

💡 Tip: Just enter your bank account details carefully — Posh, powered by Stripe, automatically checks if your bank supports SEPA. If it does, payouts will work smoothly without any extra setup!


Checking if Your Bank Accepts SEPA

If your bank is located in any of these countries, it already supports SEPA payments:

  • All EU countries

  • Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, Monaco, San Marino, Vatican City, Andorra, and the UK

Quick ways to confirm:

  • Look for an IBAN (International Bank Account Number) — if your bank provides one, it accepts SEPA.

  • You can also contact your bank and ask if they support “SEPA Direct Debit.”

✅ You don’t need a European company, ID, or physical address.
💡 Many organizers use Wise or Revolut to get EUR accounts that support SEPA transfers.


What Is SEPA?

SEPA (Single Euro Payments Area) allows euro payments to move easily between European banks — just like local transfers.


Coming Soon: Adaptive Pricing (Q2 2026)

Stripe is developing Adaptive Pricing, which will let organizers:

  • Show ticket prices in each attendee’s local currency

  • Still receive payouts in their default currency

This means you’ll soon be able to sell globally without creating multiple orgs or workarounds.

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