Remit vs. Submit: Key Differences & When to Use Each
Remit means to send money or to cancel/forgive something; submit means to present, yield, or hand over for consideration.
People confuse remit and submit because both involve “sending” documents. In offices, a CEO might say “remit the invoice” when they actually want you to submit it—triggering panic over whether money is owed.
Key Differences
Remit focuses on payment or cancellation: “Remit the fee.” Submit centers on offering material for approval: “Submit your report.” One moves cash; the other moves responsibility.
Which One Should You Choose?
Use remit when money changes hands. Use submit when you hand over work, forms, or control. If you’re attaching a PDF to a portal, you’re submitting; if you’re wiring funds, you’re remitting.
Examples and Daily Life
PayPal asks you to remit €50 to a friend. Google Forms asks you to submit your survey. Confusing them could delay payments or approvals—so pause before clicking “send.”
Can I submit payment?
Yes, but you’d usually say “submit a payment form” and “remit the amount.”
Is “remit” only for money?
No, it can also mean to cancel a debt or a penalty, though that usage is formal.