Bank SWIFT code

Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC)

Paris, France · BIC CMCIFRPP

SWIFT / BIC
CMCIFRPP
Bank code
CMCI
Country
FR
Location
PP
Branch
XXX (primary office)
Head office city
Paris
BIC length
8 characters (primary office)

What each part of CMCIFRPP means

A SWIFT/BIC code is read left to right in four blocks.

CMCI
Bank code
4 letters — the institution (here, the bank prefix)
FR
Country code
2 letters — ISO 3166 country
PP
Location code
2 characters — city/region; a digit often means a test code
XXX
Branch code
3 characters — XXX marks the primary office

How to use this SWIFT code

Use CMCIFRPP as the receiver bank SWIFT/BIC code when initiating an international wire transfer to Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC). Combine it with the recipient's account number (or France IBAN) and full name. Double-check the code with Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC) or the recipient before sending — branch-specific BICs can differ from the head-office code.

All France SWIFT codesDecode this BIC in lookup →France IBAN format

Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC) SWIFT code FAQ

What is the SWIFT code for Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC)?
The SWIFT/BIC code for Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC) is CMCIFRPP, identifying the bank's head office in Paris, France. Use it as the receiver-bank BIC when initiating an international wire transfer. France uses IBANs (27 characters), so include the recipient's IBAN.
Is CMCIFRPP an 8- or 11-character SWIFT code?
CMCIFRPP is an 8-character BIC — the bank's primary (head-office) code. An 11-character form would append a branch code (often XXX for the primary office).
Where do I find the SWIFT code for Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC)?
It is shown on bank statements and in online banking, or you can ask Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC) directly. You can also decode CMCIFRPP in the SWIFT/BIC lookup on this site. Always confirm the code with the receiving bank before sending funds.
What's the difference between CMCIFRPP and a routing number?
A SWIFT/BIC code identifies a bank for cross-border payments, while a routing number (ABA) is used for domestic US transfers. For an international wire to Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC), you need the SWIFT code; for a domestic US transfer you need the routing number.

⚠️ BIC data reflects the head-office code from public bank disclosures. Branch-specific SWIFT codes may differ — confirm with Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC) for exact routing before sending funds.