Bank Of Thailand Bot Northern Regional Office Branch Swift Code of Bangkok | |
Bank Name | Bank Of Thailand |
Swift/BIC Code | BOTHTHB1NRO |
Branch | Bot Northern Regional Office |
City | Bangkok |
Country | Thailand TH |
Branch Code | NRO |
SWIFT code (8 characters) | BOTHTHB1 |
BIC Code analysis | 8-letter swift code: BOTHTHB1 Branch code: NRO Institution s 4-letter code: BOTH Country code: TH Location code: B1 |
OR Choose other Branch From Bank Of Thailand Bangkok Listed Below
- ACCOUNTING GROUP
- BAHTNET OPERATION TEAM 1 PAYMENT SYSTEMS GROUP
- BAHTNET OPERATION TEAM 2 PAYMENT SYSTEMS GROUP
- BAHTNET OPERATION TEAM PAYMENT SYSTEMS GROUP
- BOT DEPOSITS ACCOUNT MANAGEMENT SERVICES
- BOT DEPOSITS ACCOUNT SERVICES TEAM
- BOT NORTHEASTERN REGIONAL OFFICE
- BOT NORTHERN REGIONAL OFFICE
- BOT SOUTHERN REGIONAL OFFICE
- CREDIT AND REFINANCING DIVISION FINANCIAL MARKETS OPERATIONS GROUP
- DEPOSITS AND DEBT INSTRUMENTS GROUP
- ELECTRONIC CLEARING HOUSE PAYMENT SYSTEMS GROUP
- FUND MANAGEMENT GROUP
- NOTE ISSUE GROUP
- TREASURY OPERATIONS DIVISION F O G
What is Bank Of Thailand Bot Northern Regional Office SWIFT Code.
The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) (also known as ISO 9362, SWIFT-BIC, BIC code, SWIFT ID or SWIFT code) is a standard format of Business Identifier Codes approved by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). It is a unique identification code for both financial and non-financial institutions. (When assigned to a non-financial institution, a code may also be known as a Business Entity Identifier or BEI.) These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international wire transfers, and also for the exchange of other messages between banks. The codes can sometimes be found on account statements. SWIFT and BIC codes are basically the same.
The SWIFT code is 8 or 11 characters?
Example: BOTHTHB1NRO- BOTH4 letters: Institution Code or bank code.
- TH2 letters: ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code.
- B12 letters or digits: location code
- If the second character is "0", then it is typically a test BIC as opposed to a BIC used on the live network.
- If the second character is "1", then it denotes a passive participant in the SWIFT network
- If the second character is "2", then it typically indicates a reverse billing BIC, where the recipient pays for the message as opposed to the more usual mode whereby the sender pays for the message.
- NRO last 3 letters or digits: branch code.
- Where an 8-digit code is given, it may be assumed that it refers to the primary office.