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Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 29978004)
Considering most people are probably using this card in China where PBOC is supported, I would tend to think that fallback transactions would be viewed with more scrutiny.
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Originally Posted by tmiw
(Post 29979338)
Normally I'd agree, but UnionPay has to know that PBOC acceptance in the US isn't all that great. You'd think they'd provide some guidance to issuers to ensure a good customer experience insomuch as possible. Of course, such guidance might not actually be mandatory for issuers to follow. :p
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Originally Posted by reclusive46
(Post 29981055)
I agree. Discover has no issues with all the fallback transactions abroad because they know that Discover's EMV acceptance is poor internationally.
As expected, Walmart worked with PBOC without a PIN or signature: http://i.imgur.com/KuiB96Im.png It's interesting that the receipt still says DISCV TEND. I then went to my local Safeway where the chip card failed to read. I swiped the card, was prompted for the PIN, and asked if I wanted cash back. This transaction went through as a debit purchase. I'm drawing from my memory, but I remember being able to press cancel and run over the Discover network as well. |
Anyone else finding it harder to use this card with the rise of wechat pay and alipay? Not just do some places not even take credit cards any more but new terminals designed for qr codes that just happen to have cc swipe too don't work reliably.
Hui lau shan in shenzhen card didn't work, but then again neither did a visa. Had to resort to wechat pay in the end as I had no cash. |
My card is expiring this month and I haven’t received a renewal card yet. Has anyone else experienced this? |
Originally Posted by Magic Pickles
(Post 30436132)
My card is expiring this month and I haven’t received a renewal card yet. Has anyone else experienced this? |
Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 30440459)
Mine is expiring this morning as well, and I haven't received another card either. I imagine there might be a few people whose cards had an October expiration date? (Applications opened at the end of October 2016.)
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Originally Posted by Magic Pickles
(Post 30458741)
My renewal arrived today! :cool: |
Hi fellas, just now diving into this whole UnionPay thing after an unpleasant trip to China with only my U.S. Visa card. (yikes!) I can go to a local branch here in the Bay Area to apply for the ICBC Union Pay in person, but with all the recent news that WeChat now accept "foreign credit cards" for its wallet (and subsequently plenty of expat websites out there debunking that theory), has anyone recently tried inputting your U.S. UnionPay card into your WeChat wallet?
And the way I understand it with the Chinese-based UP card, it is linked to a current account (so it acts like a debit card over there I suppose). Would there be an advantage to open a new checking account with the US based ICBC or is this UP card operate independently of a checking account? I am currently running into a situation where my WeChat account needs to be validated (I use a China SIM card to register) and seems like I need to set up a wallet (and of course NONE of my credit cards work!) Thanks so much in advance for any pointers! |
Originally Posted by Jamester
(Post 30510539)
Hi fellas, just now diving into this whole UnionPay thing after an unpleasant trip to China with only my U.S. Visa card. (yikes!) I can go to a local branch here in the Bay Area to apply for the ICBC Union Pay in person, but with all the recent news that WeChat now accept "foreign credit cards" for its wallet (and subsequently plenty of expat websites out there debunking that theory), has anyone recently tried inputting your U.S. UnionPay card into your WeChat wallet?
And the way I understand it with the Chinese-based UP card, it is linked to a current account (so it acts like a debit card over there I suppose). Would there be an advantage to open a new checking account with the US based ICBC or is this UP card operate independently of a checking account? I am currently running into a situation where my WeChat account needs to be validated (I use a China SIM card to register) and seems like I need to set up a wallet (and of course NONE of my credit cards work!) Thanks so much in advance for any pointers! The US ICBC UnionPay card is independent of the checking account, and acts like a credit card. There are some quirks with this card where it can act like a debit card if manufactured spending is your thing, but that's outside of the scope of this thread and best left as an exercise for the end user. :) I signed up for a checking account when I applied for the card in branch at South San Francisco two years ago, but it's not required. Initially you couldn't do a direct bill pay from ICBC's website and had to push the payment from another checking account. However, the third party checking account functionality has been present since early 2017. |
Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 30510590)
I haven't tried inputting the card into a WeChat wallet. There was an example somewhere - I forget if it was here or another forum - of either WeChat or Alipay, but it required a friend "on the inside" to add the card manually.
The US ICBC UnionPay card is independent of the checking account, and acts like a credit card. There are some quirks with this card where it can act like a debit card if manufactured spending is your thing, but that's outside of the scope of this thread and best left as an exercise for the end user. :) I signed up for a checking account when I applied for the card in branch at South San Francisco two years ago, but it's not required. Initially you couldn't do a direct bill pay from ICBC's website and had to push the payment from another checking account. However, the third party checking account functionality has been present since early 2017. Good to know (in the U.S.) UP card is a credit card, not debit. I have *other* cards for manufactured spending, so I'm strictly planning to use this in China (so that I don't get laughed at the next time I produce a credit card there). So it sounds like the main benefit of a U.S. ICBC UP card is strictly for paying with the physical card in China then.... as long as the vendor still has a POS machine, and not some QR code for WeChat, correct? And I know this may be off-topic but I would love to hear from those who has successfully put in a U.S. based credit card onto their WeChat, since WeChat Pay seems to be the future. Thx! |
Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 30510590)
I haven't tried inputting the card into a WeChat wallet. There was an example somewhere - I forget if it was here or another forum - of either WeChat or Alipay, but it required a friend "on the inside" to add the card manually.
The US ICBC UnionPay card is independent of the checking account, and acts like a credit card. There are some quirks with this card where it can act like a debit card if manufactured spending is your thing, but that's outside of the scope of this thread and best left as an exercise for the end user. :) I signed up for a checking account when I applied for the card in branch at South San Francisco two years ago, but it's not required. Initially you couldn't do a direct bill pay from ICBC's website and had to push the payment from another checking account. However, the third party checking account functionality has been present since early 2017. I'd gladly authenticate myself with an icbc us checking acct if that worked in the apps. Ughh. I'm kinda tempted to just try to open an acct in shenzhen on a tourist visa which i hear is now possible. |
Originally Posted by Jamester
(Post 30510785)
.....And I know this may be off-topic but I would love to hear from those who has successfully put in a U.S. based credit card onto their WeChat, since WeChat Pay seems to be the future.
Thx! UnionPay cards issued by ICBC USA, however, is useful for card present transactions. Most POS machines in China takes UnionPay only. |
Originally Posted by TerryK
(Post 30510847)
You can link a foreign credit card, UnionPay or not, yet you cannot use it unless you are validated against a China based bank account. In other words, this foreign credit card feature is only useful to expats in China or foreigners who can open a bank account in China. BTW, ICBC USA, even though owned by iCBC, is not an eligible bank. :(
UnionPay cards issued by ICBC USA, however, is useful for card present transactions. Most POS machines in China takes UnionPay only. |
I'm in Shenzhen now. I tried to use Google Pay at McDonald's with my CSR (since it said Apple Pay was supported) but the payment failed. I tried QuickPass with the physical UnionPay card, and I'm happy to report that it worked! The Shenzhen Metro also advertises using QuickPass as an open loop payment system, but I sort of want someone else to be the data point for that one. :)
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