Using an ATM to get foreign currency is still insanely better than using a currency exchange place like you see in international airports. Talking 1-2% fees versus 15-20% or higher.
Yeah. If you have an option, going to a currency exchange place in a local area is a lot closer to the exchange rate.
The ATM I used had like a $6 fee on top of a 5% of what I was taking out. Ewww.
The guy you’re replying to, is saying the opposite.
Using an ATM usually gets you your banks exchanging rate, which depending on your bank, can be damn near free. (If the ATM tries to do the exchange for you, refuse, let your bank do it).
Same goes online. Paying with paypal, I never ever use their exchange service. Charging my card directly with the foreign currency is ALWAYS a better deal due to how good the exchange rate provided by my bank is.
I did not know this. Thank you for the info. Next time I will be looking for ATMs that do this.
Most modern exchange services are semi-scams.
Most banks will let you use your card in other currencies, directly, and just do the exchange on their end.
And it’s usually really favorable too. If you’ve used your card abroad “like normal” for stuff like a restaurant meal, then you’ve used your banks currency exchange service.
It’ll still add up if you make a ton of small purchases, and it would be good to check what your particular bank actually charges for exchanges.
But, lots of places will pretend to offer to do the exchange for you, at sky-high rates, when really you can just charge your card directly, and get a much better rate via your bank.
Once saved a friend like 50 bucks when she bought a leather jacket on the expensive side during a cruise. The shop offered to do the exchange for her, as if that was necessary. I saw the rate and immediately told her to refuse, knowing our bank charges almost nothing for foreign currency charges. She would have fallen for it.
You can almost always deny to accept the exchange fee and get your own bank’s rate.
Probably depends on the EULA of your bank, cashless transactions are ok for me, ATM withdrawal in foreign currency comes with extra charge.
it does yes, but currency exchange places near airports/train stations are notorious for pretty much stealing from you. Seriously, never buy a different currency near any place considered vaguely international, it can get as bad as getting half of what you’d get in a reasonable place, nowhere near as bad as withdrawing from an ATM in a foreign country
I’ve found that going into a casino is a great way to exchange money when going to Canada.
Yep. ATM or call your bank before you leave they can often give you foreign currency with advanced notice
There are neobanks for people who travel a lot. Both Revolut and Wise should let you either convert ahead of time or just convert as you withdraw (Revolut has a notice saying please don’t let the ATM do its own conversion as the ATMs are going to be higher fees). Currencies here. They apparently have a 2% withdrawal fee with a 1 EUR minimum. Revolut’s fee-free maximum depends on your plan. Metal gets you a metal card and 800 EUR per month fee free, Ultra or whatever gets you a platinum plated card and 2000 EUR per month fee free, but it’s also ridiculously expensive compared to their free, plus and premium plans. Metal itself is already a bit expensive, but it’s still way less than Ultra.
Wise has both a monthly allowance for proportional fee free withdrawals and a monthly limit of 2 completely feeless withdrawals. You get hit by fees once you hit either limit Basically: From the 3rd withdrawal of the month I pay 0.50 EUR for every withdrawal, and for any withdrawals above 200 EUR per month I pay 1.75%. If I make card payments or withdrawals in e.g the US, there’s a 0.47% conversion fee from EUR. In South Korea it’s 0.71%.
In both cases, the fees are predictable and low, just gotta familiarize yourself with the beforehand. There are other similar options out there as well, but these are the ones I use (Wise is great for giving you both a USD and EUR native account so you can receive USD and convert it to EUR instantly. Other currencies as well, but these are the ones that matter for me). You can register for either one without visiting a branch or anything, but you will have to do some KYC checks for both of them and for Wise at least once you hit a certain amount transferred or a certain transfer size, you’ll have to do an AML check. Not a lot of fun when you receive a large sum and you need a couple of grand out of your account the same day and get the AML check, but it doesn’t take a long time as long as you can prove the source of your income is legit. For me I had some trouble with it because I had proof but not the exact types of documents their app allowed to use, but I called their customer support and it was resolved quickly. Since then, no issues.
I imagine most people already know that KYC = Know Your Customer. AML means Anti-Money Laundering. The former is only about your identity, the latter is meant to check whether your funds are legit, or you’re receiving a bunch of money from terrorists or something.
Let’s check my balance first…
45 million won
…I don’t know what this means!
About… 4.5 thousand dollars… My best bet.
I like the way the cad dollar is a x100 the yen and x1000 the won. Roughly of course it makes the mathing a bit easier
ooh ouch my bones
As the snake charmer said in Snakes on a Submarine: Maybe one, Maybe many.
Yikes!
I just got dollars at Camp Humphreys and used US money. It was always accepted.
And you always overpaid because of it.
Not 20 years ago. We did watch the exchange rates and swap dollars for wan when it was beneficial, but it was fairly easy math to do price conversions in our head back then.
The rate was around 400 wan to 1 dollar. It never fluctuated more than 15 or 20 wan either way.