Transferencias de dinero ACE - Blog

CEC Bank SWIFT Codes: Romania's Oldest Bank and International Wire Transfers Explained

CEC Bank SWIFT Codes: Romania's Oldest Bank and International Wire Transfers Explained

15 Apr 2026


CEC Bank is not just any Romanian bank. Founded in 1864 — making it the oldest continuously operating bank in Romania and one of the oldest financial institutions in Eastern Europe — it carries a unique distinction that no other Romanian bank can claim: it remains wholly owned by the Romanian state through the Ministry of Public Finance. For the millions of Romanians spread across Europe and beyond, CEC Bank is often the institution their families at home have trusted for generations. If someone abroad is sending money to a CEC Bank account, or if you are expecting a wire transfer into yours, this guide covers everything — the correct CEC Bank SWIFT codes, how each character is structured, how international payments flow through the bank's network, and what every sender needs to know before initiating a transfer.

Romania's Unique Position as Both a Major Remittance Sender and Receiver

Before diving into SWIFT codes, it helps to understand the financial context surrounding CEC Bank's role in international transfers. Romania occupies a remarkable dual position in global remittance flows.

In 2024, Romania had the highest share of emigrants among all EU member states, with approximately 24% of its population — around 4.6 million people — living abroad, up from 14.7% of the population in 2010. The largest Romanian communities abroad are concentrated in Germany (968,697), Italy (880,402), and the United Kingdom (713,578). The money these communities send home passes through Romanian banks — and CEC Bank, with its unrivalled national branch network, is one of the primary receiving institutions.

The Identifiers That Power Romanian Banking

Romania's banking system uses a structured set of codes depending on whether a transfer is domestic or international. Understanding which code applies to which situation is the foundation of getting a transfer right.

IBAN — International Bank Account Number is the primary identifier for individual accounts. Romanian IBANs begin with RO and are 24 characters long. The IBAN encodes your bank identifier and account number and is used for both domestic and international transfers. This is what identifies your specific account.

SWIFT codes — also called swift bic codes — identify the bank as an institution in the international payment network and consist of 8 or 11 characters. While your IBAN identifies your account, the SWIFT code tells the SWIFT network which bank to route the payment to. For any transfer arriving from outside Romania into a CEC Bank account, the SWIFT code is essential.

Domestic routing codes within Romania are used for transfers between Romanian banks through the national interbank infrastructure — entirely separate from SWIFT.

For international wire transfers, IBAN and SWIFT code work together. One identifies your bank. The other identifies your account. Both are non-negotiable.

CEC Bank SWIFT Code

The primary SWIFT code for CEC Bank S.A. in Romania is:

CECEROBUXXX

This is the head office SWIFT code registered to CEC Bank's Bucharest headquarters at Calea Victoriei 11-13, including Calea Victoriei 13, Bucharest. It is the standard and universally accepted code for receiving international wire transfers into any Romanian CEC Bank account.

One important fact about CEC Bank's SWIFT codes: while some banks use different swift codes or different codes for different branches or specific banking services, CEC Bank primarily operates with a single unified SWIFT code — CECEROBUXXX — for its standard banking operations. This means there is usually less need to verify branch-level variations than at banks with different branches.

In 2024, CEC Bank's total assets grew by 17.25% to reach 109.43 billion RON, holding a 10.95% market share and ranking as the third largest bank in Romania — a remarkable rise from the 6.5% market share it held in 2018. (TheBanks.eu) This expansion has made CEC Bank an increasingly significant destination for international wire transfers from the Romanian diaspora.

Decoding CECEROBUXXX — Every Character Explained

Breaking down the CEC Bank SWIFT code character by character gives an example of how this 11-character code communicates with the international payment system:

  • CECE — Bank code. The first four characters are the institution identifier assigned by SWIFT. CECE is derived from CEC Bank's abbreviated name — a shortened reference to Casa de Economii ?i Consemna?iuni, the institution's original Romanian name. Every SWIFT code associated with CEC Bank anywhere in its network will always begin with these four characters.
  • RO — Country code. These two letters identify Romania as the country where CEC Bank is incorporated and operates. RO is Romania's ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code, standardised globally for use in banking, travel documents, and international commerce.
  • BU — Location code. These two characters specify Bucharest as the city of CEC Bank's registered head office. BU is the location code assigned to Bucharest within the SWIFT system and appears in the SWIFT codes of all Romanian banks headquartered in the capital.
  • XXX — Branch code. The final three characters indicate that this code refers to the bank's primary or head office rather than a specific branch. For CEC Bank, XXX is effectively the universal code across all account types, reflecting the bank's unified SWIFT infrastructure.

All the Details a Sender Needs to Send Money Into Your CEC Bank Account

When someone abroad is sending an international wire transfer to your CEC Bank account, they will need the following information to complete the payment correctly, and they should check and double check the recipient details before submitting the transfer:

  • Bank name: CEC Bank SA
  • SWIFT/BIC code: CECEROBUXXX
  • Bank address: Calea Victoriei 11-13, Bucharest, Romania
  • Your IBAN: Your personal CEC Bank IBAN — find this in your CEC Bank online banking, mobile app, on any bank statement, or on a recent bank statement
  • Your full registered name: Exactly as it appears on your CEC Bank account

Always provide both your IBAN and the SWIFT code together. The SWIFT code routes the payment to CEC Bank as the receiving institution. The IBAN routes it to your specific account. Providing one without the other is incomplete and will typically result in the transfer being returned or held for additional information.

Using a wrong swift code can cause a delayed or failed transaction, so if the sender is unsure, they should confirm the exact swift code before sending.

How Money Actually Gets From Abroad Into a CEC Bank Account

Payments That Stay Within Romania

For transfers between Romanian bank accounts — whether personal, business, or between different Romanian banks — SWIFT codes play no role. Romanian domestic transfers use IBANs processed through the national interbank payment system. This infrastructure is entirely separate from the international SWIFT network.

If a Romania-based sender is transferring money to your CEC Bank account from another Romanian bank, they need only your IBAN. Providing a SWIFT code for a domestic Romanian transfer is unnecessary and will not affect processing.

When the Money Crosses a Border

When an international wire transfer for your CEC Bank account is initiated, including international money transfers, the payment enters the SWIFT network at the sending bank. The sending institution looks up CECEROBUXXX to identify CEC Bank within the global SWIFT directory, and before a swift payment is released, the sender should confirm the recipient name, IBAN, and SWIFT details. The payment instruction then travels toward Romania — directly between the two institutions if they have a bilateral relationship, or via one or more correspondent banks if a direct relationship does not exist.

Once the payment instruction reaches CEC Bank's systems in Bucharest, CEC Bank credits the funds to your specific account using your IBAN. Most international transfers arrive within one to five business days, depending on the sending country, currencies, sending bank's processing schedule, and any correspondent bank routing, though incorrect details can delay the transaction.

The Romanian National Bank's balance of payments data shows that personal remittances received from Romanians abroad amounted to over USD 9.5 billion in 2024 — making Romania one of the largest per-capita remittance-receiving economies in the European Union. (The Global Economy) Much of this flows through CEC Bank's extensive national network, particularly to families in rural and smaller urban communities across the country.

The Scenarios That Require the CEC Bank SWIFT Code

You need the CEC Bank SWIFT code — CECEROBUXXX — in these specific situations:

  • Receiving a salary or income from abroad. CEC Bank's strong presence across Romania — particularly in rural and semi-urban communities — means many workers employed abroad by international companies specify CEC Bank as their home account for salary remittances. Your employer's payroll team needs CECEROBUXXX alongside your IBAN to route payments correctly.
  • Receiving remittances from family in the diaspora. With 4.58 million Romanians living abroad in 2024 according to UN DESA data, family financial support flows are substantial. The UK, Germany, and Italy alone account for the majority of inbound remittances, with Romanians in the UK sending particularly high volumes relative to community size. When a family member initiates a wire transfer, the SWIFT code is what routes it to CEC Bank.
  • Receiving payments from international business clients. CEC Bank has a strong focus on SME and agricultural financing in Romania. Business owners and contractors receiving international payments from clients abroad need to provide CECEROBUXXX so the payer's bank can process the international wire correctly.
  • Receiving funds through international remittance platforms. If someone uses a dedicated remittance service to send money to your CEC Bank account, the platform's payment system uses the SWIFT code to identify CEC Bank as the receiving institution.
  • Confirming banking details on international forms. Investment platforms, overseas institutions, or financial compliance forms sometimes ask for your bank's SWIFT code to verify your banking relationship. CECEROBUXXX is the correct identifier for CEC Bank SA.

CEC Bank vs International Banking Systems — What Every Sender Needs to Know

CEC Bank vs IBAN — Transfers From Europe

European countries use IBAN as the standard account-level identifier for international transfers. For any transfer arriving from Europe into your CEC Bank account, both your Romanian IBAN and the SWIFT code CECEROBUXXX are required. The SWIFT code identifies CEC Bank as the Romanian institution. The IBAN identifies your specific account within CEC Bank. A European transfer submitted with only a SWIFT code and no IBAN cannot be credited to any specific account and will be returned.

CEC Bank vs US Routing Numbers

Routing numbers are nine-digit codes used exclusively within the United States domestic banking system to identify financial institutions for domestic US transfers. They have no role in international wire transfers leaving the US. If someone in the United States is sending a wire to your CEC Bank account in Romania, they need your Romanian IBAN and CECEROBUXXX — not a routing number. US-based senders will be asked for the receiving bank's SWIFT code as part of their bank's international wire transfer form.

CEC Bank vs Indian IFSC Codes

IFSC codes identify specific bank branches within India's domestic payment network for NEFT, RTGS, and IMPS transfers. They are exclusively domestic tools and carry no meaning in international cross-border transfers. If someone in India is sending an international wire to your CEC Bank account, they provide CECEROBUXXX and your IBAN — not any IFSC code.

Finding Your CEC Bank SWIFT Code and Account Details — All the Ways

MethodHow to Find the IBAN / SWIFT CodeKey Details
CEC Bank Online BankingLog into your CEC Bank internet banking account and open the account details sectionYour IBAN and SWIFT code are displayed alongside your account number and sort code
CEC Bank Mobile AppOpen the CEC Bank mobile app and access your account informationYour IBAN appears under account details, while the SWIFT code is available in the international payments section
Bank StatementsReview your CEC Bank account statementsStatements include your IBAN and may also reference the BIC/SWIFT code, especially if you have received international transfers
CEC Bank BranchesVisit any CEC Bank branch for assistanceCEC Bank operates over 1,000 branches and territorial units across Romania, including more than 800 rural locations, making in-person verification widely accessible
CEC Bank Customer ServiceContact CEC Bank through official customer support channelsCustomer service can confirm the correct SWIFT code before making a high-value international transfer

Costly Mistakes That Are Easy to Prevent

Accuracy matters here because one wrong detail can affect the transaction.

Common MistakeWhat HappensCorrect Approach
Using a SWIFT code for domestic Romanian transfersCreates unnecessary confusion because Romanian domestic payments do not use the SWIFT networkUse only the recipient’s IBAN for transfers between Romanian bank accounts
Typing CECEROBUXXX with spaces or breaksBanking systems may reject or fail to process the transferEnter the SWIFT code exactly as one continuous string: CECEROBUXXX
Providing only the SWIFT code without the IBANThe bank can identify the institution but not the individual accountAlways provide both the IBAN and SWIFT code together for international transfers
Failing to verify the IBAN carefullyEven one incorrect character can send funds to the wrong account or cause rejectionCopy the 24-character Romanian IBAN directly from official banking sources rather than entering it manually, and verify the recipient details with the bank to avoid delays
Relying on an old SWIFT code from outdated documentsOlder codes may no longer be valid for international processingCheck the official CEC Bank page or contact the bank to confirm the current code before making important transfers

Should You Worry About Sharing Your CEC Bank SWIFT Code?

Absolutely not. Your SWIFT code is public information — it identifies CEC Bank SA as a Romanian banking institution, not your individual account. Sharing it with anyone, including those sending you money from abroad, carries no financial risk.

Your IBAN is also safe to share for the purpose of receiving payments. It enables someone to credit your account but cannot be used to access it, authorise payments from it, or retrieve any personal financial information about you.

What you should protect carefully and never share with anyone: your CEC Bank internet banking username and password, your card PIN, one-time security codes sent to your phone, or your full card details including expiry date and CVV. CEC Bank will never request any of these through an unsolicited call, email, or text message. Any such request should be treated as a fraud attempt and reported to CEC Bank immediately through their official channels.

This information is general guidance only, and you should verify all details with CEC Bank before any international transaction in respect of official bank confirmation and the limits of how this information is used.

Connecting Romania's Oldest Bank to the World's Remittance Flows

CEC Bank carries 160 years of financial history and a branch network that reaches further into rural Romania than any other institution. When someone abroad sends money to a CEC Bank account, they are connecting to that legacy through a single code: CECEROBUXXX. Pair it with your 24-character Romanian IBAN — available instantly through your CEC Bank app or any branch — and you give any sender around the world everything they need to transfer funds directly to your account.

For Romanians living abroad who regularly send remittances home to family banking with CEC Bank, finding a reliable and affordable transfer platform makes a direct difference to the total amount received. ACE Money Transfer's practical guide covers exactly this: How to Send Money to Romania Online Safely — with information on transfer methods, costs, and what to look for in a remittance service for the Romanian corridor.

If you are sending money internationally and need a fast, transparent, and cost-effective option, ACE Money Transfer delivers competitive exchange rates, direct CEC Bank account delivery, and real-time transfer tracking — with no hidden charges at any stage of the process.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the SWIFT code for CEC Bank Romania?

The primary SWIFT code for CEC Bank SA is CECEROBUXXX. This is registered to CEC Bank's Bucharest head office at Calea Victoriei 11-13 and is the standard code for receiving international wire transfers into Romanian CEC Bank accounts.

Does CEC Bank use the same SWIFT code for all its branches?

CEC Bank primarily operates with a single unified SWIFT code — CECEROBUXXX — for standard banking operations, making it simpler to use than banks with multiple branch-specific codes. Always verify with CEC Bank directly if you receive conflicting information.

How old is CEC Bank and why is it state-owned?

CEC Bank was founded on 28 July 1864, making it Romania's oldest continuously operating bank — over 160 years old. It is wholly owned by the Romanian Ministry of Public Finance and has remained in state hands through all of Romania's post-communist banking privatisations, serving a public mandate for financial inclusion particularly in rural areas.

Do I need both a SWIFT code and an IBAN to receive an international transfer?

Yes. The SWIFT code identifies CEC Bank as the receiving institution within the international payment network. The IBAN identifies your specific account within CEC Bank. Both are required for a complete and accurate international wire transfer.

How long does an international transfer to CEC Bank take?

Most international wire transfers arrive within one to five business days. The exact timing depends on the sending country, currencies involved, and whether correspondent banks are involved in the routing. Transfers sent during Romanian business hours on weekdays typically process most efficiently.

Disclaimer: This article is intended for general informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as legal, regulatory, tax, business, or financial advice. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of ACE Money Transfer. While reasonable efforts have been made to ensure accuracy, no warranty is given as to the completeness, accuracy, or currency of the information. Services and practices mentioned may vary by provider and jurisdiction. Readers should consult qualified professional advisors before making any financial or business decisions.


Tips for Expatriates Business & Finance Working Abroad

PREVNEXT
ACE Money Transfer Secure an Investment of 1.5 Million Pounds
Why ShopeePay Is the Smartest Wallet for Indonesia Transfers
  • Categories
  • Country