Money in Europe: What You Should Know Before You Go

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • Can I use my Credit Card when I travel? Do I need to get cash? Are there any tips on keeping my money safe while I travel? This videos focuses on and answers a number of questions that travelers have posted to us about money while they travel. From Travelers Checks to whether you use a debit card or credit card we try to help with our usual honest travel advice on money while traveling Europe.
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Комментарии • 567

  • @oskich
    @oskich 5 лет назад +71

    Forget cash in the Nordics - Card is king here nowdays... A lot of restaurants and cafés don't accept cash anymore. VISA/Mastercard (AmEx in some places) or mobile payment is the norm.

    • @mammutMK2
      @mammutMK2 5 лет назад

      Simular in poland, but some shops still only take cash. They let you pay with card at 1pln. Just always pay with your card in pln, not your own currency, you won't get any better exchange rate :-) . But the ATM scams you with the exchange rate, first it's lower displayed (ok) but then they pull some extra fees and that is not displayed in the report, you just see it on your bank account. An ask if you can pay card, fell for that, had a sticker on the door accepting everything and than wanted cash. In Germany you need a lot of cash, a lot of shops don't accept CC, even in big malls or at a publuc marked they want cash, and be careful in restaurants...oh, we only take cash,wtf...that is really embarrassing when scratching cash together...but hey, it's total normal running around with 200€ cash in the middle of the night

    • @Morrov
      @Morrov 5 лет назад +1

      @@mammutMK2 small shops might not accept card because they have to pay for every transaction.
      Elavon and other companies like that take their cut for processing and managing card payments.
      I currently work in a sports shop in a rather remote part of Gdańsk, it's kinda far away from everyone, so we don't make huge profits, but, we still have to pay at least 5k every month to Elavon.
      For little shops, accepting card for little payments would be crippling, even though very few people carry cash with them in the age of NFC, where your phone is all you need

    • @mammutMK2
      @mammutMK2 5 лет назад

      That's why you need to buy for at least for 10€ in Germany before you can use a DD-card. That way they can compensate the fees

    • @kaloschke
      @kaloschke 5 лет назад

      Good luck going out with no cash in Berlin, nearly all of the small Clubs or corner Bars only take cash or you have to make At least 10 Euro which is 4 beer 🤣

    • @sams3015
      @sams3015 5 лет назад +1

      Its so funny my Danish BF got a shock in Hamburg when so many places wouldn't take card.

  • @KasdeyasVids
    @KasdeyasVids 7 лет назад +142

    When the Euro was introduced there were special scrap books to collect every Euro coin from every country. And they still exist with all extensions. Maybe that's something your boys might also enjoy?

    • @thesuomi8550
      @thesuomi8550 6 лет назад +9

      They sell all the Vatican coins in Vatican for like 90€

    • @mynamehasspacesinit8687
      @mynamehasspacesinit8687 5 лет назад +1

      We had something similar with Quarters, when our mint started issuing different designs for states.

    • @thesuomi8550
      @thesuomi8550 5 лет назад +3

      @@JeroenJA do you mean the 2 euro ones? They can be used for paying and you often get them as change

  • @eccoeco3454
    @eccoeco3454 5 лет назад +151

    Why am I watching this I AM european...

  • @raphaelamak
    @raphaelamak 5 лет назад +41

    1. Don't use Euronet, as some comments have pointed out
    2. If you go to Sweden, don't bother getting any cash, many shops don't accept cash anymore (bank fees, risk of robbery etc.) and you might end up with a pile of Swedish crowns that keeps sinking in value every day (at least for now)

    • @mammutMK2
      @mammutMK2 5 лет назад +1

      Can confirm that...it's a total scam...exchange rate 15% lower is displayed and then they pull some extra 15% exchange fees that are not displayed,not even on the receipt, it only says you took 100# ...but on you bank account they pull you 130@, and you thought like "ok, 115@". The new way of : what you see, what you expect, and what they really take from you...and now way to complain because you can't proof it (oh yeah, it's standing in the regulations written in 1/32 inch

    • @gordusmaximus4990
      @gordusmaximus4990 5 лет назад

      Risk of Robbery? Sweden is safe what the hell.

    • @mammutMK2
      @mammutMK2 5 лет назад

      It was related to the euro net ATM.

    • @derionone
      @derionone 5 лет назад +2

      @@gordusmaximus4990 sweden safe ? 😂😂😂😂

    • @petersmith2040
      @petersmith2040 4 года назад +1

      Agree. The irony is that Euronet is not even a European company. It's actually an American company based in Kansas. It's just like Haagen-Dazs ice cream is actually an American brand disguised as European. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euronet_Worldwide

  • @kowkje
    @kowkje 7 лет назад +106

    In the Netherlands are some Cashless stores. Debit cards are king in the Netherlands.

    • @norweminguerfochnare9921
      @norweminguerfochnare9921 5 лет назад +3

      I've been there last year and my experience was jus the opposite: they only accepted cash in most places

    • @IO-hh2fz
      @IO-hh2fz 5 лет назад +9

      @@norweminguerfochnare9921 unless you are out in the middle of nowhere in the netherlands (very hard to do) just about every store where you go you can pay in cash, use your pin (debit) card or pay using contactless payment.
      Almost every store where you can pin you can use contactless payment (it is built in to the machine) however the amount you can pay is capped at around 20-25 euro's.

    • @Ncloud
      @Ncloud 5 лет назад

      Debit sucks lmao, credit is superior

    • @davidvilchez2209
      @davidvilchez2209 5 лет назад

      Yeah coffee shops dont accept cards

    • @thatoneofmany
      @thatoneofmany 5 лет назад +5

      @@IO-hh2fz I am from the middle of nowhere. Our closest snackbar is pin only. So its not only in the middle of nowhere.

  • @vincesvv
    @vincesvv 5 лет назад +43

    Never use a Euronet ATM

  • @bestgameplay831
    @bestgameplay831 5 лет назад +167

    English is always an option except in France

    • @ospero7681
      @ospero7681 5 лет назад +13

      I get that this is at least partly a joke, but in all honesty, I've had more issues as someone who only speaks English in more rural corners of Italy and Spain than France.

    • @Davis38
      @Davis38 5 лет назад +29

      @@ospero7681 But some french do know english, but don't want to speak it, while some italians don't know english but want to get you to understand them with gestures etc...

    • @ahp2547
      @ahp2547 5 лет назад +1

      Davis Schina i mean when you are the most visited capital in the world it is understandable that you get annoyed at tourists

    • @bestgameplay831
      @bestgameplay831 5 лет назад +4

      @@ahp2547 or just dont be a dick

    • @nonsensemister
      @nonsensemister 5 лет назад +2

      A lot of people spoke english in france but not a single one spoke english in italy. I had luck that there are a lot of indian polyglots

  • @TripHacksDC
    @TripHacksDC 7 лет назад +67

    One travel hack to use up all your local currency is to ask to pay your hotel bill in cash first when you check out, then put the balance on your credit card!

    • @ahmedrisha
      @ahmedrisha 7 лет назад +4

      Trip Hacks DC I don't get it

    • @TripHacksDC
      @TripHacksDC 7 лет назад +24

      If your bill is €150 and you have €50 cash that you don't want to take back home, ask to pay your hotel with €50 cash and the €100 balance on your credit card.

    • @pricethepeanut
      @pricethepeanut 7 лет назад

      Dude, I've been watching your channel! Going to DC end of this month.

    • @TripHacksDC
      @TripHacksDC 7 лет назад

      Awesome. Enjoy your trip!

    • @SilverSamurai12
      @SilverSamurai12 7 лет назад +1

      Actually this is a great idea. I did this in Chile when I had about $110 leftover and was about to leave for the airport. Paid if off and then did the balance on my credit card.
      Part of me was thinking "why didn't I think of this before?!"

  • @Mimi8402
    @Mimi8402 7 лет назад +27

    I swear your timing with this
    topic is impeccable, I leave for Italy this weekend and I was just researching this.

    • @woltersworld
      @woltersworld  7 лет назад +7

      +FemmeK that's awesome. Have a great trip and I hope the video helps!

    • @anthonyturner4050
      @anthonyturner4050 7 лет назад

      FemmeK I leave for Italy this weekend as well!!

    • @shadowdog500
      @shadowdog500 7 лет назад

      You both will love Italy!!!

    • @artyfly100
      @artyfly100 7 лет назад

      Welcome and have fun then! Where are you going to go? (i'm italian)

    • @O-townplaya
      @O-townplaya 6 лет назад

      arthur staal no answer lol

  • @PerSiden
    @PerSiden 7 лет назад +78

    Cash isn't king everywhere in Europe. In Sweden for example you will find not all cafés and restaurants accept cash. Cards are on the other hand accepted everywhere.

    • @tosht2515
      @tosht2515 7 лет назад +15

      +Mehmet Akif Aydoğdu
      1 - tablet restaurants are popping up all over the U.S. so ordering, *paying,* tipping is all electronic including receipt
      2 - no cash saves time for owners/managers who have to reconcile the sales every night
      3 - credit only is accurate to the penny
      *But the biggest reason*
      4 - it's a well known fact that most customers spend more when using credit cards

    • @PerSiden
      @PerSiden 7 лет назад +6

      Mehmet Akif Aydoğdu they simply save a lot of money; approved cash registers are expensive and the cash have to be handled safely and deposited every day at the bank for a fee. Going "cash free" saves them a lot of work but also speed up payments as card payments are much faster these days, especially for small amounts.

    • @Hammer0165
      @Hammer0165 7 лет назад +2

      The same is the case in the Netherlands, I haven't carried cash for months now, everything can be (and is even expected to be) done with cash.

    • @herrfriberger5
      @herrfriberger5 7 лет назад +9

      The fees on card payments are usually more costly. Some say it's about the danger of robberies, but it's also about Sweden always wanting to be "the most modern country, in the world". Few swedes realise this leads to a totalitarian control state where the banks, and therefore the state, see *_every_* little step you take.

    • @PerSiden
      @PerSiden 7 лет назад +4

      Herr Friberger the cost of handling cash is way higher than the card fees, which also have been reduced in later years.
      I agree there is a privacy concern when almost all payments and money transfer is electronic, but to most people it's simply a matter of convenience. Many Swedes have already quit carrying cash around unless they're going abroad, myself included. Many bank offices doesn't even accept cash deposits and withdrawals, and the number of ATMs are going down.
      One remedy to privacy concerns is to buy a prepaid debit card, and pay for it in cash.

  • @CaptainKeytie00
    @CaptainKeytie00 7 лет назад +12

    I think before you travel to europe you should ask your local bank if they have any partner banks in the country you go to. They take 5-10 euro per withdraw but at partner banks theres usually no fee. Also try to use ATMs by known companies and not one of these public street Atms, there they often have higher fees.

  • @In1998able
    @In1998able 7 лет назад +70

    And never never use the local ripoff change offices

    • @woltersworld
      @woltersworld  7 лет назад +20

      +In1998able EVER

    • @joehoe222
      @joehoe222 6 лет назад +1

      Well, since the Euro, that problem has decimated a lot in Western Europe. I was walking in Venice in the 90's and I saw dozens of them, last time it was decimated to around 5. They are hit hard.

    • @jurajanal2277
      @jurajanal2277 5 лет назад

      Don't change money with random people, you lose your money or your life

    • @gilles111
      @gilles111 5 лет назад +2

      Always use an ATM or bank to change (and check via internet of the bank is really a bank because a lot of those offices call themselves a bank to let tourists believe they are reliable).

    • @myra0224
      @myra0224 5 лет назад

      I used that once because I had no choice (limited time and no other atm while on a school trip). They charged me €20 for €50 that I took :/

  • @PSverre
    @PSverre 5 лет назад +18

    Cash is not "the go to" in Norway. You'll be able to pay with card anywhere you go. Also many services, like busses and trains don't accept cash anymore.

    • @kacperwoch4368
      @kacperwoch4368 5 лет назад

      So, you have money in your hand but you can't pay anyway? Is that legal?

    • @PSverre
      @PSverre 5 лет назад

      @@kacperwoch4368 No you can't, not to the bussdriver. Cash is a legal payment so the buss company has to accept it. You'll be able to prepay your ticket with cash at the company headcourters, or at a machine. The company is obliged to accept cash, but the bussdriver isn't. This is done for their own saftey, and also makes the transaction faster. I work at a cashfree hotel, and we have to accept cash, but we strongley encurages the custumer to pay with a card.

    • @kacperwoch4368
      @kacperwoch4368 5 лет назад

      @@PSverre That's interresting. The cash vs card payment situation is somewhat different where I live. Many people embraced cash-free payment as the default but the difference is that I have never heared of a place you can't pay with cash or that you may be discouraged from doing so. It's not uncommon to pay in cash for cars or even houses, not to avoid taxes but because people like to see their money. Maybe there is less trust in digital numbers?

  • @Timmie1995
    @Timmie1995 5 лет назад +3

    Cash is pretty much dead in the Netherlands. Many places don't even accept it anymore. Credit card, or even better your debit card is king. I believe there's a huge north/south difference in Europe these days.

  • @HungryGuyStories
    @HungryGuyStories 5 лет назад +6

    I once used travelers checks when I went to Europe. They were a pain in the poo-poo hole! Never again!
    Now, I pay for my hotel in advance before I leave the US, and then use credit cards for train tickets and other large expenses, and cash for meals and taxis and everything else.

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA 5 лет назад

      I'm from Belgium, I relate travel check only to 'seen at school in economic' as an old way to get cash in land of arrival at a bank in the before-my-birth past before ATM machine became really common in the south of Europe. (NW europe, south europe and eastern europe are historically economcally totally different things, and still today often want totally different things in monetairy politics.)
      I'm from 1984, and don't think my parents used those since my birth , or at least since the 90ties..
      or you ask beforehand at you local bank to reserve foreign bills, or you just take from ATM at location, since the 90ties any ridiculous high exchange rates disappeared within Europe certainly for debit card.
      Credit cards, I ONLY have one cause for foreign internet shops lacking a debit card option. I consider VISA a real low secure paying method compared to security on a debit card..
      I try to do as little transaction as possible cause you have to be ably to spot a month later if anyone overcharged or extra charging ... since just the numbers PRINTED ON THE CARD ITSELF are in almost all anglosaksen countries considered enough to just charge thing on it .. really weird, while with my debit card I have control over the exact amount I approve on for payment when I pay, without any concern after that i would have to check the exact amount charged..

  • @jackaylward-williams9064
    @jackaylward-williams9064 3 года назад +1

    When I visited Prague the summer before last, everywhere that accepted euros was adding a good 50% to the price

  • @paulleigh7792
    @paulleigh7792 5 лет назад +4

    In Europe, they won’t accept your national currency for exchange if it is torn or the bank tellers back home have scribbled on it! This oversight can seriously effect your budget.

  • @ajl1239
    @ajl1239 7 лет назад +24

    NEVER EVER let them charge your card in USD (i.e. dynamic currency conversion) -- always ask to be charged in the local currency when making a credit card purchase. If you are charged in USD, you will get a terrible rate.

  • @casperrenting
    @casperrenting 5 лет назад +10

    I miss a remark about the number one tourist trap when it comes to money matters: EuroNet ATMs.

  • @pinecone8969
    @pinecone8969 7 лет назад +6

    The one you said about the ATM's exchange rates were spot on in my experience in Lisbon. The actual GBP/EUR exchange rate at the time was about 1.08. All the ATM's were offering only about 0.98. We selected the 'decline offer' option and our bank gave us something like 1.07 for the exchange. Saved us around £50.

    • @alexanderh.9721
      @alexanderh.9721 7 лет назад +1

      Christopher Parry Same ATM experience in Croatia,select always 'decline offer', meaning deny fixed exchange rate !

    • @robertjames6890
      @robertjames6890 Год назад

      Same, as an American who has never left North America but is still very much a traveler at heart, as well as I am obsessed with local economies and international currencies of all kinds, especially pesos from certain Latin American countries (particularly Mexico and Argentina) or euros from Europe, or pounds from the UK or Australian or Canadian dollars, I always look at the exchange rate AND the fees in case I do happen to travel at any time in my life. And yes, Mark Wolters is right in his advice, when you take cash out, NEVER, EVER take the conversion when they offer it, let your bank back home handle the conversion because oftentimes you can lose 10% just by taking the ATM’s offered “conversion”.

  • @MarkBH70
    @MarkBH70 7 лет назад +1

    Just got back from Terceira, Azores, Portugal. Cheap. I used a money belt and a wallet with a chain. Saved me this time.

  • @christopherx7428
    @christopherx7428 5 лет назад +2

    Just a few comments:
    1. Cash is not always king! In Sweden, it is becoming more and more common that stores don't accept cash at all! On the other hand, you can use a card almost anywhere: Buying a newspaper, some strawberries in the market square, an ice cream at the beach - you name it, they will most probably all accept cards!
    2. If possible, avoid the ATM:s at the airport or obvoius tourist spots. You get a better exchange rate at the ATM the locals use.

  • @colinp2238
    @colinp2238 7 лет назад +1

    As a side note if you go to Israel they accept US dollars in lots of places. I took shekels and USD when I went (I'm a Brit) from England and got on fine. In Europe I tend to take the nearest equivalent to £500 in Euros and my debit card to use as you suggest in the local ATMs and that is also a good way to do it.
    When carrying cash in Europe in a wallet fold the notes so that the tops cannot be seen and if beggars come to you just give them coins and do not take your wallet out in front of them. There can be someone watching and follow you until they get an oppotunity to relieve you of your wallet.
    Stay safe.

  • @Tarel1000
    @Tarel1000 4 года назад +1

    Im just lucky that Europe today has the Euro. I remember times when you had all this different currencies was terrible.

    • @2003Aidas
      @2003Aidas 3 года назад

      Europe still has different currencies

  • @runarandersen878
    @runarandersen878 7 лет назад +2

    In Norway often the debit cards have highest fees on withdraw abroad. Many credit card is fee, but on most of them you have to pay interest. So check your cards before traveling - you might save some money.
    Second: I would recommend traveling with more than one card - in case on of the stops working.

  • @colinp2238
    @colinp2238 7 лет назад +2

    Oh and by the way for travellers to the UK the £50 note is looked on with suspicion as in it;s early days it was forged. Try to get £20 or £10 they are more widely acceptable. Banks and Post Offices will usually change notes down if you have £50 notes.

    • @jerry2357
      @jerry2357 5 лет назад

      colin Paterson
      It’s worthwhile pointing out that if you withdraw money from an ATM in the UK it will be paid out in £10 and £20 notes, so you will have no problem of this sort.

  • @ldc0322
    @ldc0322 5 лет назад +2

    For the three euros thing, the false one is the one in the middle, since the one on the left has the Italian back and the one on the right has the German one

    • @326Alan
      @326Alan 5 лет назад +1

      Luca Di Cicco and it says $5 😅

  • @zofiamagdalena75
    @zofiamagdalena75 7 лет назад +6

    In Poland it's now very common to pay with card :) Usually I don't have cash so it's very nice option

    • @GdzieJestNemo
      @GdzieJestNemo 7 лет назад

      it will be only hard in turist places with icecreams, turist gadges etc

  • @Schwallex
    @Schwallex 6 лет назад +14

    0:40 "Russia has the rubble" lol.
    It sure does, mate, you're technically 100% correct. But I do think you meant the rouble or ruble there.
    Cheers, a fellow traveller.

  • @YukiNoYume
    @YukiNoYume 7 лет назад +16

    In Switzerland you don't have to worry about big bills. You can pay for a bottle of water for 1.- at a small store with a 200.- bill and no one will question you ;)

    • @kacperwoch4368
      @kacperwoch4368 7 лет назад +3

      How much does the 0,5l bottle of water cost in Switzerland?

    • @YukiNoYume
      @YukiNoYume 7 лет назад +3

      0.30 - 1.50 Swiss Francs, depends on the brand. But bottled water is actually a bad example, since we have high quality tap water (and even from the fountains in the city) for free ;)

    • @szoszk
      @szoszk 7 лет назад +2

      In Germany you would pay around 1.30€ on a Train station for a 0.5l bottle (supermarkets obviously a lot cheaper, around 0.10€ for a 0.5l bottle). Since Switzerland is more expensive than Germany, water probably is also.

    • @Commentator541
      @Commentator541 6 лет назад +1

      Where did you buy a 10 cent bottle of water? At mega chains it might be 15-20 sometimes when it's at a huge discount, but usually it is 35 in huge retails, 50 at smaller retails, 1 at metro, 1-1.5 at places like train stations, airports etc. Water in Germany is drinkable, just like 99% of Europe so it is really smarter to bring a refillable container, as it is unsanitary to refill plastic PET bottles.

    • @thesuomi8550
      @thesuomi8550 6 лет назад

      @@YukiNoYume I don't think tap water is free (almost but just almost)

  • @Maitch3000
    @Maitch3000 5 лет назад +4

    My advise is to always bring both a debit card and a credit card. I have been in situations where only my debit card worked.

  • @idrisanwer4354
    @idrisanwer4354 7 лет назад +1

    I love your work please never stop. And I wanna say something crazy I'm watching your videos for improve my English lol because your sound very clear to comprehension and please go ahead just like that and never forget that you are talking to rhe world and its mean u have to use a simple language to understood. Thank u again sir

  • @Rusznyakbalazs
    @Rusznyakbalazs 5 лет назад +1

    In Latvia, before the euro, they had the latvian lat as currency, and that was one of the strongest currencies in the world. It had a 2 lat coin, wich worth 2,84 euros or 3,15 dollars. And that was just one coin! Also there was the 500 lats banknote, which is 711 euro or almost 800 dollars!

  • @henriccarlsson9052
    @henriccarlsson9052 7 лет назад +1

    Obvious tip, but what I do is go to a large supermarket chain and buy something cheap with my big bill from the ATM. Big stores have the cash for that.
    Prepaid VISA? I had no idea. Sounds smart.

  • @deluk20
    @deluk20 5 лет назад +24

    Please, please, please. It is PIN, not PIN number.
    It is not called a Personal Identification Number number.

  • @jpeene8389
    @jpeene8389 7 лет назад +2

    In the Netherlands we actually prefer if you use your card to pay, even small payments

  • @theapparatus
    @theapparatus 7 лет назад +2

    Hey Mark. Just a silly suggestion. You keep talking about making phone calls to your bank while you;re traveling. May want to do a video on how to make an international phone call. I bet a fair number of folks wouldn't have a clue as to how to do one when they're standing at the front desk of a hotel and their card is declined. Thanks.

  • @kristus20
    @kristus20 2 года назад +1

    In Belgium in my experience bigger bills like the €100 are always accepted. The €200 and €500 ones are also accepted when the cashier is able to verify them (if they have a method for this available.) if not, then they can be refused for an unproportionally small amount but if you have to pay like say €450 then a €500 bill will always be accepted because it would be illegal to refuse them in such a situation. If they still won’t accepted it, send a complaint to the federal public service of finance because they will get fined for such unlawful practices. Money = money you know. As for very small amounts, an amount of more then 50 coins is legally refuseable. You are allowed to use up to 50 coins and it has to be accepted, if you use more they are able to refuse it. Generally It happens very often that people want to refuse the 1 and 2 eurocent coins but again they are legal tender and have to be accepted even if the total is rounded to +- 5 cents which is legal and used often to discourage usage of 1 and 2 cent coins, you are still legally able to use them. Don’t let anyone refuse you using them!

    • @user-ux2kk5vp7m
      @user-ux2kk5vp7m 2 года назад

      It is not illegal to refuse a €500. Just because something is legal tender does not mean stores are legally obligated to accept it, it is their choice.

    • @kristus20
      @kristus20 2 года назад +1

      @@user-ux2kk5vp7m sorry but at least in Belgium as far as I know, any store has to accept it. There is an exception to this though. A trader that doesn’t have te means to verify the authenticity of the note can refuse it (only in case of €200 and €500 notes) but then they would have to make sure that you as a customer know in advance for example by putting up a sign that explains this, though putting the sign up permanently would also be illegal (why this is the case I don’t know, but it can be only a temporary measure, this is the point where the rules get complicated). This rule is to counter potential fraud, but is very rarely put into practice. A second exception is when the trader in question is unable to provide the necessary exchange money. But generally speaking, no it’s not just up to the shopkeeper to decide what he accepts.

    • @kristus20
      @kristus20 2 года назад +1

      I might also add that cash is the only tender shops are lawfully obligated to accept. Electronic payments are purely optional and can be refused anytime, anywhere. I know of instances payment by card is only accepted for amounts X and up. Whatever traders to with ANY other payment methode other than cash, that’s totally up to them. This applies to the entire eurozone btw!

  • @therainmaker5049
    @therainmaker5049 7 лет назад +5

    It's not just the ATMs that give you problems if you don't have a chip in the card in Europe. A lot of Europeans don't even know what to do about a card that only swipes. And also places like gas stations sometimes you can only swipe by paying inside. And unlike the States, some of these stations are permanently unmanned. Best to bring a chip card for these reasons and more.

  • @lauraoliveira5882
    @lauraoliveira5882 5 лет назад +5

    Me and my family took cash to Germany, left it in the hotel’s safe and we were stolen! Cash and passports. The hotel claims that if you don’t have actual proof (like a video of someone stealing it), it’s your problem! We are not going back to Germany and I shall avoid countries that require cash from now on!

  • @BillGreenAZ
    @BillGreenAZ 7 лет назад +4

    I wrote this in another one of your videos on currency but not all here have seen that. When I went to buy Euros at my bank in the US they wanted to charge 10% more than the Exchange rate so I waited until I got to Paris and used an ATM which only charged me 3%. My bank charged me $3.00 for the transaction so it was much less using an ATM in the destination country.

  • @MaxTSanches
    @MaxTSanches 5 лет назад +1

    A few years ago we pickup some English pound bills from our local bank in Canada. When we landed in London we were informed that they were Old Bills and were not in valid. We had to find a branch of our bank in London and get them to exchange the bills for the New Bills. I have found that the UK changes there bills (and coins) every few years. So new we check the Bank of England website to see what is valid and which ones we have to take to the bank once we land. :)

    • @jimmcdiarmid7308
      @jimmcdiarmid7308 3 года назад

      Happened to me outside Windsor Castle, but a nearby bank exchanged it for me.

  • @armanmislang7726
    @armanmislang7726 6 лет назад +1

    I wished I watched this before my Europe trip last October and November. Had a huge problem with train machines asking for a PIN for all my cards. Good thing I memorized one of my cards' cash advance pin in case I needed to withdraw money and that's what it was. The cash advance PIN! Hahaha. Lesson learned. :)

  • @2712animefreak
    @2712animefreak 5 лет назад +2

    One more thing you can do is convert to the currency of the country you are going to in your bank before going. I don't know how it is in other countries but most banks in Europe seem to offer this service. If they don't have the currency you want at the moment, then you can usually order it and they can get it for you in about two days.

    • @Takador
      @Takador 5 лет назад

      It's not worth it tbh

    • @2712animefreak
      @2712animefreak 5 лет назад

      @@Takador It can be if both currencies are pretty obscure, otherwise you need to either change twice or walk around to find someone that takes what you have. Here I'm mostly talking about physical currency.

  • @rickylou176
    @rickylou176 7 лет назад

    We just returned this week from China, thanks for the great advice prior to our trip, ten memorable days! The ATM required your passport to exchange or withdraw cash. So the hotel concierge was the best place to change dollars. Oh and by the way they would only except "perfect bills" they then recorded each bills serial number. Talk about feeling watched! Lol.

  • @karlbergen6826
    @karlbergen6826 5 лет назад +2

    Montenegro has a fantastic train ride from the Port city of Bar up to a town on the Serbian Birder I can't remember how to spell its name but it sure is pretty. It was on a RUclips video.

  • @jasontemme8204
    @jasontemme8204 3 года назад

    A good tip is to make sure the money is current if you are returning as some Notes are changed and some countries do not take the old ones. For example the Czech koruna for the 20 and 50 are now coins not notes anymore, but most places will take the notes if you have them for the 50 Kč

  • @SeverityOne
    @SeverityOne 7 лет назад +1

    To be without money in a country with as many banks as Switzerland has, is a little bit ironic.
    If you have coins left, there may be local charities, or a local church, that are happy with them. I've seen this before.
    With ATMs, another reason to have a chip card is because they can't be easily duplicated. I've never seen it myself, but I always check if there isn't a small extra bit where you put your card in. It can be deceptively small, and it may happen in shops as well - in fact, it's more likely to happen in a shop than at a bank's ATM. These devices scan your card and transmit them to somebody who can then duplicate your card, and if they read your PIN number over your shoulder, that's all they need.

  • @TheFluffiesChannel
    @TheFluffiesChannel 7 лет назад +1

    Great tips! We are going to Europe shortly and it helped us a lot.

  • @MusicalRomancegrl
    @MusicalRomancegrl 4 года назад

    Another way to use the last of your currency is to put it on a gift card or something like that. My aunt and uncle travel quite a lot, and they always bring a Starbucks card with them. On their last day of travel (or their last day of using a particular currency) they put most of the money they have left on the Starbucks card. Then they use the Starbucks card when they get back to the states.

  • @TheLoughDuck55
    @TheLoughDuck55 5 лет назад +4

    Beware of Euronet or Celtic sea ATM’s

  • @AnaBotticelli
    @AnaBotticelli 7 лет назад +2

    I love your videos so much. I've been a subscriber for a while and I'm really thankful for them. Thank you so much Wolter!!!!

  • @eileendoran6747
    @eileendoran6747 7 лет назад +1

    The tip about keeping emergency cash is a great one. Our Mastercard was retained in ATM due to an error in PIN input when on honeymoon in Prague, we weren't offered emergency cash by the bank and had to pay our hotel in cash from a debit card.
    To cut a long story short due to delays with the bank we were short of money and it really put a dampener on the honeymoon and my husband's first trip to Prague. One night we could only eat pizza and had to be really careful about what we ordered, not great for a honeymoon! Very frustrating to have loads of wedding cash in an account that we could not access. Even a € 200 emergency stash would have made all the difference, I always keep a stash of cash on trips now in the hotel safe. You never think it's going to happen to you !

    • @pianocrisante90
      @pianocrisante90 Год назад

      Was it a debit card that got eaten by the ATM?

  • @Idellle
    @Idellle 5 лет назад +1

    When I was in Iceland I got so confused with the currency 1 euro is 135,894 ISK. So everything looked to expensive. Got some money left over but the exchange place did not take my coins. They are not worth anything. ISK is almost like Greek Drachma. When I was in Greece as a child I could not count that high and had difficulty buying icecream and empty all my money on the counter. I hoped they where honest. I love Euros now haha

    • @jimmcdiarmid7308
      @jimmcdiarmid7308 3 года назад

      I bought something in airport in Iceland thinking it was $5, turned out to be $50, still ok, it was artwork.

  • @Devyyy
    @Devyyy 6 лет назад +1

    Dang dude, you have a great catalog of videos to watch! Love the content!

  • @finalfighterx6046
    @finalfighterx6046 5 лет назад

    Bank of america doesn't need travel notices anymore but they keep the feature available cus it makes the clients feel at ease

  • @abigail6849
    @abigail6849 5 лет назад

    Not going to Europe anytime soon but I like watching these videos! Such good info! 😁😁

  • @johanfagerstromjarlenfors
    @johanfagerstromjarlenfors 5 лет назад +8

    Don’t use cash in northern europe. In sweden people HATE cash. We have many stores that don’t accept cash.
    The opposit in southern europe even though they nowadays mostly accept card :)
    In sweden it normal pay with the phone with ”swish”

    • @elix5230
      @elix5230 5 лет назад

      In Poland there is a lot of stores where card is not acceptable...

    • @daveykonijnenberg951
      @daveykonijnenberg951 5 лет назад

      Netherlands accepts cash and cards but not always creditcards

    • @daveykonijnenberg951
      @daveykonijnenberg951 5 лет назад

      In Netherlands most people use there phone to pay scan

  • @brusse
    @brusse 5 лет назад

    Cards are preferred by shops in Norway, even for the smallest purchases. Cashless cafes and kiosks are becoming more common. In other words, no need to take out much Norwegian kroner (though we do have new bank notes now, they're pretty cool).

  • @davidkharat1
    @davidkharat1 5 лет назад +3

    I love your videos, they are true and correct specially how to watch out for thieves and pick pockets.
    On my trip last year to Madrid, i forgot to put my documents and money in to the safe , I carried them in a shoulder bag during the breakfast in the hotel.
    It was stolen within seconds. I had to to to the police station to report the incident. Luckily some of my credit cards was safe in my wallet. I couldn't even get a european sim card without my passport.
    After replacing the passport in US embassy , we were able to call all the banks and cancel all the stollen card , check book.
    Miraculously police found my bag next day ( less $200 foreign money). This was the first stupid thing i have done in 73 years of my life.
    Thanks to the Madrid police and AC hotel manager who allowed us to extend our stay 3 more night w/o charge.

  • @ajl1239
    @ajl1239 7 лет назад

    Had a recent experience in Shanghai, China at the airport when trying to get money for the first time: my Visa-branded checking account debit card would not work at all -- at two banks, even after notifying the bank in advance. Ultimately, though, my non-Visa savings account ATM card worked in the same ATM where my Visa debit card was declined. So, it's a good idea to have not only your checking account ATM card, but also your savings account ATM card. This is also good, because if one of your two cards for your two accounts is lost or stolen -- or in the case of a trip to Brazil in 2013, skimmed and used for fraud -- then you can continue your travels and have the ability to take out cash.

  • @bestgameplay831
    @bestgameplay831 5 лет назад +7

    People dont prefer cash here at all sometimes they even refuse it they want by card

    • @linusfotograf
      @linusfotograf 5 лет назад +1

      best gameplay I’ve only found that to be true in Sweden

    • @bestgameplay831
      @bestgameplay831 5 лет назад

      @@linusfotograf the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany

    • @simonkofoed-heller8697
      @simonkofoed-heller8697 5 лет назад +3

      @@bestgameplay831 You will most certainly not find that people will have card over cash in Germany... Maybe in the tourist hotspots, but outside of those it is a wasteland of electronic payment solutions. I have been to McDonald's where they only took EC card, no Visa, no MasterCard, only the pinless EC and cash. Germany is perhaps the one of the only countries left in Europe where they would rather have cash than card!

    • @bestgameplay831
      @bestgameplay831 5 лет назад

      @@simonkofoed-heller8697 well see i dont have a credit card bc Im not american, Thats more of a them problem. Since they use credit a lot. But the main reason people prefer is card is if there is a robbery there is no money to be stolen

  • @christopherfoley1508
    @christopherfoley1508 7 лет назад +4

    *WORD OF WARNING* I wanted to use up my Romanian Leu in the airport before leaving but lo and behold they priced all the duty free in Euros. However, one of the shop assistance helpfully (NOT) pointed out there was a currency converter at one of the gates (which probably had a terrible conversion). *LESSON*: Use your currency up before going to airport to avoid being ripped off if using lesser used currencies in Europe.

  • @michanowalinski3218
    @michanowalinski3218 2 года назад

    Revolut is the best option! It's a prepaid card that works everywhere. Noone is gonna give you that good rates as these guys do

  • @paulvanbeuzekom1843
    @paulvanbeuzekom1843 7 лет назад +1

    In Hungary I HAD to pay cash everywhere. A friend of mine couldn't even pay 120$ (converted from HUF) in a massive store like footlocker. He had to get cash at the ATM

    • @jurajanal2277
      @jurajanal2277 5 лет назад

      Also gas pumps in Hungary are scams, you go buy something for 1.5€ but all you have is 2€ coin and they don't give you that 50c coin, no they give you 50 forints coin.
      Right now 50c = 157.64 forints, so yeah, half of my school got scammed

  • @HungryGuyStories
    @HungryGuyStories 5 лет назад +22

    What would happen if I went to a bank in the UK and handed them some pound bills and asked them to convert it to kilograms?

    • @75yado
      @75yado 5 лет назад +3

      I don't think they have that kind of humor sense but they may actually do so :D :D because kilo is usually 100 bank note

    • @kristoffersparegodt420
      @kristoffersparegodt420 5 лет назад

      The Matrix will break

    • @theghost1920
      @theghost1920 5 лет назад +1

      Pound bills? That don't make sense. If your referring to money its pound sterling. The is other countries use the pound as money, sterling is what the UK use, not those bills you oddly mentioned. A bill is the thing you get after a meal at a restaurant. If you said something like that in the UK you'd get laughed at n mocked when you left. Don't know where your from but please read up on a country first before saying dumb stuff like you just did.

  • @mariashine4966
    @mariashine4966 7 лет назад

    Hi mark that was nice of u thanks for doing this video it really big help for me and for others us well!u have such a beautiful perspective that's why I always inspired to watch ur videos ur amazing person and also ur wife Jocelyn more power to ur show!!

  • @sdraper2011
    @sdraper2011 7 лет назад +4

    Great advice as usual. :)

  • @DeadWolfRakon
    @DeadWolfRakon 7 лет назад +2

    In The Netherlands you can feel free to pay with your card when you're in a big chain they prefer it. But smaller places/restaurants defenitly preffer cash

  • @sidkings
    @sidkings 3 года назад

    @2:40, traditional banks will charge very high fees plus give you a rubbish exchange rate. Better off using Revolut, Currensea, Transferwise, Curve, Monzo, Starling or whatever the US equivalent is. With these card you generally get the Intrabank rate or Mastercard rate.

  • @lkrnpk
    @lkrnpk 5 лет назад +1

    I think ''cash is king'' only applies to tourist stuff, which might be the case for US too if you're a tourist there. Although Southern Europe and less developed parts of Eastern Europe, that's probably right. And mainly due to tax avoidance I would assume. Of course, there are also small traditional places and stalls where it's not because of that, but just because they're small and don't make as much money to be worth to investigate that option.

  • @mfcabrini
    @mfcabrini 6 лет назад

    Discover is now used in some countries. Best to ask when you call your credit card company.

  • @grantballard7687
    @grantballard7687 7 лет назад +3

    thanks wolters world for replying =). has made my day =)

  • @Pyrochemik007
    @Pyrochemik007 4 года назад

    Around tourist traps in Prague, there are malicious atms charging extra fees and weird exchange rates to tourists. You may have met one of those.

  • @bjornh4664
    @bjornh4664 6 лет назад +2

    Please note that there are criminal gangs that attach card skimming equipment on ATMs. It can be really well made and hard to distinguish, so make sure to learn what a proper ATM looks like in the city you are visiting.

  • @부산소녀
    @부산소녀 7 лет назад

    My favourite travel advice channel well done mark 😀

  • @Daniel-wx3qn
    @Daniel-wx3qn 5 лет назад

    If you travel a lot to Europe consider open an european account like N26 or Leopay, they are free and you can transfer money using Transfewise that charges the lowest fees. I did it when I moved from Brazil to Portugal.

  • @sarahs5112
    @sarahs5112 7 лет назад

    that's why i love your channel short and so useful videos! thank you

  • @dontravis5657
    @dontravis5657 6 лет назад

    Nice that English is offered at most ATM's in Europe ... unlike parking lot ticket machines in Germany! At least ones I encountered in Rothenburg and Lindau. Wish they were available in English :)

    • @anghinetti
      @anghinetti 6 лет назад

      Don Travis: English is the only language offered at cash machines in England.

  • @davidharris4101
    @davidharris4101 7 лет назад

    If you travel with a new card or a new procedure, try it out in a local ATM to make sure it works before you go. Also no PINs >4 digits.

  • @Saperwill
    @Saperwill 4 года назад

    Oh monetnegro ive been there when lockdowns started... anyways great videos

  • @lyndaconrad4549
    @lyndaconrad4549 7 лет назад

    A debit card is different from an ATM card - just make sure whatever card you're going to use links to a checking account NOT just a savings account

  • @laurenssmit4178
    @laurenssmit4178 6 лет назад +2

    heads up for people that never payed with Euro's!!!
    i've seen plenty of tourists doubting wether or not their bills were fake or real. right now the European Union has introduced new designs for the bills. it can occur that you may have 2 different €10 bills, don't worry about it. they are both accepted. if you want to look up the differences you can look for it on google.

    • @johanfagerstromjarlenfors
      @johanfagerstromjarlenfors 5 лет назад

      Laurens Smit exactly the same happend to me with franc in schweiz when i was there...
      And like 5 years ago that was the same with kronor in sweden though the old ones ate now useless 😂

  • @RaymondHng
    @RaymondHng 6 лет назад +1

    *Warning:* Not all Visa debit cards can be used outside the United States. What is worse is when the card company gives you the wrong information. I contacted Greendot Visa before my trip and informed them I will be traveling to Paris and asked if the Visa debit can be used there. The representative said it can be used and if there are any problems I can them to approve the charges. So I loaded my Visa debit card with cash. When I arrived at Charles de Gaulle airport, my Visa debit card was declined when I tried to purchase a bus ticket to Paris. When I called Greendot, they changed their story and told me the Visa debit card can only be used in the United States and refused to approve any purchases outside the US "for security purposes". No amount of arguing with a supervisor would change the situation and they accept no responsibility for the erroneous information they gave me before the trip. When I told them I'm in a foreign country with no access to my money on the VIsa debit card, the only suggestion they offered was to use the debit card to purchase a plane ticket back to the US.

  • @lilgypsy7925
    @lilgypsy7925 5 лет назад

    When I traveled to Japan I went to my local Chase bank to let them know of the dates and also ordered some ten for my travels. I was also able to use my debit card to get cash at 7-11's

  • @grantballard7687
    @grantballard7687 7 лет назад +4

    iv loved watching your videos man, you have no idea how much you have helped me =). i will be leaving for Europe on the 15th first time cant wait =).

    • @woltersworld
      @woltersworld  7 лет назад +2

      +grant ballard thanks Grant. We want these videos to help other travelers and it's great to know they are helping.

    • @woltersworld
      @woltersworld  7 лет назад +2

      +grant ballard thanks Grant. We want these videos to help other travelers and it's great to know they are helping.

  • @Sonny0276
    @Sonny0276 6 лет назад +1

    Great Video. Thank you for posting.

  • @LiveInSydney
    @LiveInSydney 7 лет назад +1

    I was impressed with my Australian bankwest MasterCard I used in Europe fee free! Zip, zero, nada fees!
    Bernie in sydney

  • @junto7117
    @junto7117 7 лет назад

    @waltersworld we ordered our money from our bank the the states and took the small bills over to NZ and Fiji. Then when you come back you can have the bank exchange it back. The lead time was two days.

  • @charsiubau1
    @charsiubau1 3 года назад

    Came across to your channel. I went to Luxembourg and use cash on purpose because I wanted to collect the coins with Luxembourg design. Speaking of credit cards: Hong Kong credit cards do not usually request for PIN but I make sure it works by confirming at ATM while still in HK, and use the same PIN if it is asked... let’s say at the pumps.

  • @thomashalvorsen3515
    @thomashalvorsen3515 6 лет назад

    Also bring a second debit/creditcard that u keep in the hotel safe. in case u get pick pocket'ed 👍 saves a lot of frustration if youre unlucky and lose your primary card

  • @philshea7525
    @philshea7525 5 лет назад

    You forgot the most important thing to tell your subscribers . Receipts at ATM ,s are written in the local language . So if you want to know the balance of say your prepaid card , you,ll have to ring your bank . Best to take a small notebook with you so you can keep trackof your withdrawals and hence your balance

  • @Azrael095
    @Azrael095 7 лет назад +1

    In Poland redit cards are accepted almost everywhere. I rarely ever pay with cash.

  • @emilianstefan4424
    @emilianstefan4424 5 лет назад +1

    I paid with a €200 banknote, for €12 worth of stuff, at a Chinese store in Spain. The cashier looked at me without much sympathy but had change for it. It was a nice way to get smaller bills. Also, you're missing Romanian and Hungarian money, I see.

  • @generalkawasaki9485
    @generalkawasaki9485 7 лет назад

    Best rates with debit cards isn't always the case. Sometimes you pay the local bank, your own bank, exchange rate fee, withdrawal fee, extra surcharges and what not, like if you are unfortunate enough to accidentally tap the convert in own currency scam. In countries like Japan and Poland those downtown currency converters gave me cash against the exact conversion rates with only a small commission fee of only €2,50!!

  • @Messius
    @Messius 5 лет назад +2

    ATM destroyed a lot of historical buildings in Prague :/

  • @julesvandencorput3334
    @julesvandencorput3334 6 лет назад

    I fucking love this guy’s energy ans charisma

  • @travelvideos
    @travelvideos 5 лет назад

    Kotor is such a great town and they also use euro. So no need to change moneys. My bank also tried to play that geo-blocking joke on me. Only time I was angry, but they understood.

  • @lyndaconrad4549
    @lyndaconrad4549 7 лет назад

    One more thing when you call your CC company or bank ask them if there are any countries where your card absolutely WILL NOT work

  • @panayiotisyannopoulos2668
    @panayiotisyannopoulos2668 7 лет назад

    Also in Eastern Europe countries, with weak currencies, do not exchange currency at airports. unbelievably high fees, bad bad rate. You realize it when you get out and see at a bank the rates on a board. Even in a coffee shop exchanging currency will be cheaper.
    Best thing have checked rates prior traveling and a route to your hotel and main places throug google maps all print out