Also known as IBAN
alphanumeric identifier for a bank account in any participating country, structure defined in ISO 13616
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~23 min read
A typical British bank statement header (from a fictitious bank ), showing the location of the account's IBAN
The International Bank Account Number (IBAN) is an internationally agreed upon system of identifying bank accounts across national borders to facilitate the communication and processing of cross border transactions with a reduced risk of transcription errors. An IBAN uniquely identifies the account of a customer at a financial institution. It was originally adopted by the European Committee for Banking Standards (ECBS) and since 1997 as the international standard ISO 13616 under the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). The current version is ISO 13616:2020, which indicates the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) as the formal registrar. Initially developed to facilitate payments within the European Union, it has been implemented by most European countries and numerous countries in other parts of the world, mainly in the Middle East and the Caribbean. By December 2024, 89 countries were using the IBAN numbering system.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).