Diwali Around the World: How Global Communities Keep the Festival Alive Abroad

Every October, millions around the world celebrate Diwali, the Festival of Lights — a time for family, gratitude and new beginnings. For many living abroad, it’s also a moment to feel closer to home, even when oceans apart.
Celebrating across borders
From London to Toronto, Dubai to Sydney, Diwali shines in every corner of the world. Families light diyas, share sweets and honor the triumph of light over darkness. Yet for many, the celebration also means sending support, love, and blessings to those back home.
Tradition meets technology
Today, connection is not only through rituals but also through technology - digital money transfers have become part of the modern tradition. Sending funds for gifts, groceries or festive meals helps families celebrate fully and bridges the distance between loved ones. A simple transfer can mean your family preparing a festive dinner that carries your love across borders.
How Paysend helps families stay close
With fast, secure and affordable international transfers, Paysend makes it easy to send support home for the holidays. Whether you’re sending to India, Sri Lanka or beyond, your money arrives quickly and safely, so families can focus on what matters most: being together in spirit.
Keeping the light alive
Diwali isn’t only about lamps and fireworks — it’s a reminder that love and connection shine brightest when shared. Wherever you celebrate, Paysend helps keep the light of family and tradition burning strong.
Happy Diwali from all of us at Paysend.
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Paysend has partnered with Visa to launch a limited-time promotion that makes it easy to send money internationally. From 25 March to 20 April, customers can enjoy two fee-free transfers to eligible Visa Debit cards using promo code VISASEND.
In this guide, we explain how to send money to a Visa card online, who can use the offer and why Paysend’s direct to card transfer service makes international transfers fast, simple and secure.

Long before apps, banks, or even paper money, people still had the same need we have today:
to send value across distance.
What’s changed isn’t the motivation — it’s the method.