Ibandit [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/gocardless/ibandit.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/gocardless/ibandit) ======= Ibandit is a Ruby library for manipulating and validating [IBANs](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Bank_Account_Number). The primary objective is to provide an interface that enables the storage and retrieval national banking details as a single value. This may be an IBAN, if a country fully and unambiguously supports it, or a combination of IBAN and/or pseudo-IBAN. Therefore, there are three distinct modes: 1. For countries that support any form of IBAN: construct and validate IBAN from national banking details 2. For countries that have unambiguous IBANs: deconstruct an IBAN into national banking details 3. For countries where either of the above is not possible: a pseudo-IBAN as a substitute for the above. For storage, you should always try to use the `pseudo_iban`, falling back to `iban` if it not available. For example: - Sweden does support IBANs (**1.**) but the format is ambiguous due to variable length account numbers so they cannot be deconstructed (**2.**). For persistence, we therefore recommend using pseudo-IBANs (**3.**) because the national banking details can be recovered from them. - Australia does not support IBANs (**1.** & **2.**), therefore pseudo-IBANs (**3.**) can be created from national banking details for storage. To get back the national banking details, you can pass the pseudo-IBAN to Ibandit and it will parse out the national banking details again for use. # Supported Countries | Country | Construct and Validate IBANs | Deconstruct IBANs | Pseudo IBANs | |-----------------|:----------------------------:|:------------------:|:------------------:| | Australia | | | :white_check_mark: | | Austria | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Belgium | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Bulgaria | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Croatia | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Canada | | | :white_check_mark: | | Cyprus | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Czech Republic | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Denmark | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Estonia | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Finland | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | France | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Germany | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Greece | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Hungary | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Ireland | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Iceland | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Italy | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Latvia | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Lithuania | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Luxembourg | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Monaco | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Malta | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Netherlands | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Norway | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | New Zealand | | | :white_check_mark: | | Poland | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Portugal | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Romania | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | San Marino | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Slovakia | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Slovenia | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Spain | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | | Sweden | :white_check_mark: | | :white_check_mark: | | United Kingdom | :white_check_mark: | :white_check_mark: | | ## Usage ### Installation You don't need this source code unless you want to modify the gem. If you just want to use it, you should run: ```ruby gem install ibandit ``` ### Creating IBANs All functionality is based around `IBAN` objects. To create one, simply pass a string to `Ibandit::IBAN.new`: ```ruby iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new("xq75 B a dCode 666") iban.to_s # => "XQ75BADCODE666" iban.to_s(:formatted) # => "XQ75 BADC ODE6 66" ``` Alternatively, you can [create an IBAN from national banking details](#creating-an-iban-from-national-banking-details). ### Validating an IBAN IBANs are validated based on their structure and check-digits: ```ruby iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new("XQ75 BADCODE 666") iban.valid? # => false ``` After validations, you can fetch details of any errors: ```ruby iban.errors # => { country_code: "'XQ' is not a valid..." } ``` The following error keys may be set: - `country_code` - `bank_code` - `branch_code` - `account_number` - `check_digits` - `characters` - `length` - `format` Ibandit will also apply local modulus checks if you set a modulus checker: ```ruby module ModulusChecker def self.valid_bank_code?(iban) # some_codes end def self.valid_branch_code?(iban) # some_codes end def self.valid_account_number?(iban) # some_codes end end Ibandit.modulus_checker = ModulusChecker ``` All three the `valid_bank_code?`, `valid_branch_code?` and `valid_account_number?` methods will receive an `IBAN` object. `valid_bank_code?` and `valid_branch_code?` should return true unless it is known that the bank/branch code in this IBAN are invalid in the country specified. `valid_account_number?` should return true unless it is known that the account number in this IBAN cannot be valid due to local modulus checking rules. ### Deconstructing an IBAN into national banking details SWIFT define the following components for IBANs, and publish details of how each county combines them: `country_code` : The [ISO 3166-1](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2#Officially_assigned_code_elements) country code prefix `check_digits` : Two digits calculated using part of the ISO/IEC 7064:2003 standard `swift_bank_code` : The SWIFT identifier for the bank to which the IBAN refers `swift_branch_code` : The SWIFT identifer for the branch to which the IBAN refers (not used in all countries) `swift_account_number` : The account number for the account `swift_national_id` : The national ID for the bank / branch as documented by SWIFT The SWIFT IBAN components are all available as methods on an `IBAN` object: ```ruby iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new("GB82 WEST 1234 5698 7654 32") iban.country_code # => "GB" iban.check_digits # => "82" iban.swift_bank_code # => "WEST" iban.swift_branch_code # => "123456" iban.swift_account_number # => "98765432" iban.swift_national_id # => "WEST123456" ``` In addition, it is often useful to extract any local check digits from the IBAN. These are available through a `local_check_digits` method: ```ruby iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new("ES12 1234 5678 9112 3456 7890") iban.local_check_digits # => "91" ``` In some countries, the SWIFT-defined details differ from the local details that customers are familiar with. For this reason, there are also `bank_code`, `branch_code` and `account_number` methods on an `IBAN` object. At present, these only differ from the `swift_` equivalents for Swedish bank accounts. ```ruby iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'SE', account_number: '7507-1211203' ) iban.swift_account_number # => "75071211203" iban.account_number # => "1211203" iban.swift_branch_code # => nil iban.branch_code # => "7507" ``` ### Initializing Ibandit The UK and Ireland both use part of the BIC as the `bank_code` in their IBANs. If you wish to construct UK or Irish IBANs you will either need to pass the `bank_code` explicitly, or configure Ibandit with a BIC finder: ```ruby # config/initializers/ibandit.rb Ibandit.bic_finder = -> (country_code, national_id) do # This assumes you have `BankDirectoryPlus` set up to access the data provided # by SWIFTRef in their Bank Directory Plus product. The `national_id` is the # local national ID, not the "IBAN National ID" referred to in the IBAN Plus # file (since that is the `bank_code` and the `branch_code`). BankDirectoryPlus.find_by(country_code: country_code, national_id: national_id). try(:bic) end ``` ### Creating an IBAN from national banking details In many countries customers are familiar with national details rather than their IBAN. For example, in the UK customers use their Account Number and Sort Code. To build an IBAN from local details: ```ruby # Austria iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'AT', account_number: '234573201', bank_code: '19043' ) iban.iban # => "AT611904300234573201" # Belgium iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'BE', account_number: '510-0075470-61' ) iban.iban # => "BE62510007547061" # Bulgaria iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'BG', bank_code: 'BNBG', branch_code: '9661' account_number: '1020345678' ) iban.iban # => "BG80BNBG96611020345678" # Croatia iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'HR', account_number: '1001005-1863000160', ) iban.iban # => "HR1210010051863000160" # Cyprus iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'CY', account_number: '1200527600', bank_code: '002', branch_code: '00128' ) iban.iban # => "CY17002001280000001200527600" # Czech Republic iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'CZ', bank_code: '0800', account_number_prefix: '19', account_number: '2000145399' ) iban.iban # => "CZ6508000000192000145399" # Denmark iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'DK', account_number: '345-3179681', ) iban.iban # => "DK8003450003179681" # Estonia iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'EE', account_number: '111020145685' ) iban.iban # => "EE412200111020145685" # Finland iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'FI', bank_code: '123456' account_number: '785' ) iban.iban # => "FI2112345600000785" # France iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'FR', bank_code: '20041', branch_code: '01005', account_number: '0500013M02606', ) iban.iban # => "FR1420041010050500013M02606" # Germany iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'DE', bank_code: '37040044', account_number: '0532013000' ) iban.iban # => "DE89370400440532013000" # Greece iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'GR', bank_code: '011', branch_code: '0125', account_number: '0000000012300695' ) iban.iban # => "GR16011012500000000012300695" # Hungary iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'HU', account_number: '11773016-11111018' ) iban.iban # => "HU42117730161111101800000000" # Ireland iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'IE', bank_code: 'AIBK', # optional if a BIC finder is configured branch_code: '931152', account_number: '12345678' ) iban.iban # => "IE29AIBK93115212345678" # Iceland iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'IS', bank_code: '1175' account_number: '26-19530-670269-6399' ) iban.iban # => "IS501175260195306702696399" # Italy iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'IT', bank_code: '05428', branch_code: '11101', account_number: '000000123456' ) iban.iban # => "IT60X0542811101000000123456" # Latvia iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'LV', account_number: '1234567890123', bank_code: 'BANK' ) iban.iban # => "LV72BANK1234567890123" # Lithuania iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'LT', account_number: '11101001000', bank_code: '10000' ) iban.iban # => "LT1000011101001000" # Luxembourg iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'LU', account_number: '1234567890123', bank_code: 'BANK' ) iban.iban # => "LU75BANK1234567890123" # Monaco iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'MC', bank_code: '20041', branch_code: '01005', account_number: '0500013M026' ) iban.iban # => "MC9320041010050500013M02606" # Malta iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'MT', bank_code: 'MMEB', # optional if a BIC finder is configured branch_code: '44093', account_number: '9027293051' ) iban.iban # => "MT98MMEB44093000000009027293051" # The Netherlands iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'NL', account_number: '0417164300', bank_code: 'ABNA' ) iban.iban # => "NL91ABNA0417164300" # Norway iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'NO', account_number: '8601.1117947', ) iban.iban # => "NO9386011117947" # Poland iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'PL', account_number: '60102010260000042270201111', ) iban.iban # => "PL60102010260000042270201111" # Portugal iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'PT', bank_code: '0002', branch_code: '0023', account_number: '0023843000578' ) iban.iban # => "PT50000200230023843000578" # Romania iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'RO', bank_code: 'AAAA', account_number: '1B31007593840000' ) iban.iban # => "RO49AAAA1B31007593840000" # San Marino iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'SM', bank_code: '05428', branch_code: '11101', account_number: '000000123456' ) iban.iban # => "SM88X0542811101000000123456" # Slovakia iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'SK', bank_code: '1200', account_number_prefix: '19', account_number: '8742637541' ) iban.iban # => "SK3112000000198742637541" # Slovenia iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'SI', bank_code: '19100', account_number: '1234' ) iban.iban # => "SI56191000000123438" # Spain iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'ES', account_number: '23100001180000012345' ) iban.iban # => "ES8023100001180000012345" # Sweden iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'SE', account_number: '7507-1211203' ) iban.iban # => "SE2680000000075071211203" # United Kingdom iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'GB', bank_code: 'BARC', # optional if a BIC finder is configured branch_code: '200000', account_number: '55779911' ) iban.iban # => "GB60BARC20000055779911" ``` ### Pseudo-IBANs Pseudo-IBANs can be recognized by the fact that they have `ZZ` as the third and fourth characters (these would be check digits for a regular IBAN). Note: pseudo-IBANs can be used in conjunction with IBANs depending on the country. See [Supported Countries](#supported-countries). ```ruby iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'SE', branch_code: '7507', account_number: '1211203' ) iban.pseudo_iban # => "SEZZX7507XXX1211203" iban.iban # => "SE2680000000075071211203" iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new('SEZZX7507XXX1211203') iban.country_code # => "SE" iban.branch_code # => "7507" iban.account_number # => "1211203" iban.iban # => "SE2680000000075071211203" # Australia iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'AU', branch_code: '123-456', # 6 digit BSB number account_number: '123456789' # 9 digit account number ) iban.pseudo_iban # => "AUZZ123456123456789" iban.iban # => nil iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new('AUZZ123456123456789') iban.country_code # => "AU" iban.branch_code # => "123456" iban.account_number # => "123456789" iban.iban # => nil # Canada iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'CA', bank_code: '0036', # 3 or 4 digit Financial Institution number branch_code: '00063', # 5 digit Branch Transit number account_number: '0123456' # 7 to 12 digits ) iban.pseudo_iban # => "CAZZ003600063000000123456" iban.iban # => nil iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new('CAZZ003600063000000123456') iban.country_code # => "CA" iban.bank_code # => "0036" iban.branch_code # => "00063" iban.account_number # => "000000123456" iban.iban # => nil # New Zealand iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'NZ', bank_code: '01', branch_code: '0004', account_number: '3333333-44' # 7 digit account number and 2/3-digit account suffix ) iban.pseudo_iban # => "NZZZ0100043333333044" iban.iban # => nil iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new( country_code: 'NZ', account_number: '01-0004-3333333-44' ) iban.pseudo_iban # => "NZZZ0100043333333044" iban.bank_code # => "01" iban.branch_code # => "0004" iban.account_number # => "3333333044" iban = Ibandit::IBAN.new('NZZZ0100043333333044') iban.country_code # => "NZ" iban.bank_code # => "01" iban.branch_code # => "0004" iban.account_number # => "3333333044" ``` ## Other libraries Another gem, [iban-tools](https://github.com/alphasights/iban-tools), also exists and is an excellent choice if you only require basic IBAN validation. We built Ibandit because iban-tools doesn't provide a comprehensive, consistent interface for the construction and deconstruction of IBANs into national details. --- GoCardless ♥ open source. If you do too, come [join us](https://gocardless.com/about/jobs/software-engineer).