Dollar to shilling today

The live market-implied USD/TZS rate — refreshed every 30 minutes from global market pricing.

$1 = TSh 2,635.00

Indicative rate configured at deploy — the live market sync hasn't warmed up yet. This is not an official or interbank rate, and banks and money-transfer services quote their own margins on top — the rate you're offered will differ. Market information, not financial advice.

How this rate is worked out — honestly

Most sites quoting a live dollar rate don't tell you where the number comes from. Ours is market-implied: Bitcoin trades around the clock in both dollars and shilling, and dividing the two prices gives the exchange rate the market is actually clearing at, minute by minute. It closely tracks where the currency genuinely trades, which can differ from headline official rates — and we label it for exactly what it is. Two things it is not: it's not the official or interbank rate your bank references, and it's not the rate any transfer service will give you — every provider adds a margin (often 2–5%, sometimes more) between the market rate and your rate. The gap between THIS number and YOUR quote is the fee you're really paying, whatever the service calls it.

What moves the dollar rate

Four forces do most of the work: interest-rate differentials (when US rates rise faster than local rates, money flows to dollars and the local currency weakens); inflation gaps (persistently higher local inflation erodes the currency over time — the long-term trend most emerging-market currencies show against the dollar); commodity and trade flows (export earnings supply dollars; import demand consumes them); and global risk appetite (in risk-off moments, money runs to dollars from everywhere, moving every emerging currency at once regardless of local news). Day-to-day wiggles are noise; the trend is these four.

Getting a better rate when you actually convert

The market rate is the benchmark — beating the MARGIN is the game: compare at least two providers on the all-in amount received, not the advertised rate (a "zero-fee" transfer with a wide rate margin costs more than a fee with a tight one); avoid airport and walk-in bureaux, whose margins are the market's widest; for large amounts, ask your bank to quote a dealing rate rather than accepting the sheet rate — negotiation is normal at scale; and if timing is flexible, use the history table above — converting on a strong-currency day rather than a weak one is worth more than most fee differences.

Frequently asked questions

What is the dollar to shilling rate today?

$1 is currently about TSh 2,635.00 at the market-implied rate — refreshed every 30 minutes on this page. Bank and transfer-service rates will differ by their margin.

Why is this different from my bank's rate?

Banks and transfer services quote the market rate plus their margin — typically a few percent. The difference between this page's rate and your quote is the real cost of the conversion, whatever it's labelled.

Where does this rate come from?

It's derived from Bitcoin's simultaneous pricing in dollars and shilling on global exchanges — a clean, manipulation-resistant read on where the market is actually clearing the currency, updated every 30 minutes.

Is this the official exchange rate?

No — official and interbank rates are set in regulated wholesale markets. This is the market-implied rate, and we label it that way deliberately; for official figures, check the central bank's published rates.