How to avoid getting ripped off abroad

Last year it suddenly became fashionable for the well-off to take their summer holidays in the UK. Instead of heading to Heathrow and beyond for the months of July and August, the City and all the professionals who leach their livings off it hit the A303. Status is now shown not by having enough money to fly the family to Nice in a private jet, but by having the wherewithal to afford the rent on a house in Rock in Cornwall for more than two weeks. Holidaying at home is just as popular this year – only last week I was forced to listen to a hedge-fund manager’s wife complaining about how even £5,000 a week wasn’t getting her a nice seaside villa for August. But I wonder if fashion will change next year? Given the weather here (rain, rain and more rain), I imagine a large part of even the most status-conscious of the population will think that abroad doesn’t look so bad after all. 

That said, going abroad does come with its irritations: the sun might be shining, but the second you step off the plane you have effectively issued an invitation to your bank to rip you off. Use your debit card abroad and they’ll first use a lousy exchange rate to work out how much your foreign currency will cost you. Then they’ll charge you around 2.75% as an ‘exchange-rate adjustment charge’, and finally they’ll add on a ‘purchase fee’ of a minimum of between £1 and £2 every time you use the card to make a purchase. And don’t think you can avoid the charges by withdrawing cash, because you can’t do that either – you’ll still get hit with the conversion charge and with another fee of between 1.5% and 2.5%, with an average minimum of £2, says Thisismoney.co.uk. Take out £100 and it will cost you £4.75. Take out small amounts often and that will add up fast. 

So what can you do to cut the level of charges you pay? You could simply switch your business to Nationwide Building Society – they charge no fees. But you might prefer to look at a prepaid currency card. The Sunday Times points to the Travelex Cash Passport Card as a possibility. This “can be loaded up with sterling, dollars, or euros” and once abroad used like any bank card with a Pin. But while this avoids bank charges, it comes with its own: $4.50 a go to use ATMs in the US and $3.50 if you don’t use the card for 12 months, for example.  

Much better for those travelling in the eurozone, I think, is the new Caxton FX Card. You will still be charged a fee if you use this to get money out at an ATM (€2), but on the plus side there are no other charges and you will get one of the best exchange rates on the market. If I were going abroad this year, I’d be taking a Caxton Card. Sadly, I’m not: bang on trend, as ever, I’m spending August in Shetland.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *