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When you buy a UK ETA (required for entry, at least from the US), they ask you what country you are located in, then charge you in that currency plus a conversion fee. There is no option to pay in GBP. The only way I could see to avoid the surcharge was to claim to be in the UK, which would be a problem, since it would mean you're there illegally.
The fee is trivial (about $1 on $22.50), but it annoyed me. |
Originally Posted by richarddd
(Post 37124783)
When you buy a UK ETA (required for entry, at least from the US), they ask you what country you are located in, then charge you in that currency plus a conversion fee. There is no option to pay in GBP.
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Originally Posted by richarddd
(Post 37124783)
When you buy a UK ETA (required for entry, at least from the US), they ask you what country you are located in, then charge you in that currency plus a conversion fee. There is no option to pay in GBP. The only way I could see to avoid the surcharge was to claim to be in the UK, which would be a problem, since it would mean you're there illegally.
The fee is trivial (about $1 on $22.50), but it annoyed me. |
Nice to see DCC being called out by the Charles Schwab article on saving money while traveling abroad.
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I think in some countries it's not even possible to make purchases in local currency on US cards. E.G. Aruba and Curacao function like this from what I understand. You can't even charge their local currencies on any terminal and the local bank has things set up that way.
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Originally Posted by electronicmaji
(Post 37152734)
I think in some countries it's not even possible to make purchases in local currency on US cards. E.G. Aruba and Curacao function like this from what I understand. You can't even charge their local currencies on any terminal and the local bank has things set up that way.
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Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 37153009)
While that is the case, it is not an example of DCC. The machines are processing in USD natively. So, for instance, even if you had a Canadian card denominated in CAD, you'd still see USD on the terminal in Aruba.
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Now, there is sometimes a markup versus paying in the local currency, such as in the Cayman Islands, but I wouldn't be rushing to get local cash out of an ATM.
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Full circle - China no longer DCCs?
I landed myself in a upmarket Spanish restaurant in Beijing’s Taikoo Li, not quite what I was planning for dinner (especially since I am in Beijing to fly to Spain by way of PKX and Morocco https://www.verylvke.com/en/2025/02/...d-in-one-trip/ ) but came with recommendation which it lived up to.
When it came to time to pay, I wondered whether the restaurant can take Apple Pay Visa (who offered the highest earning https://www.icbcasia.com/hk/en/promo...ture-card.html , but I have Unionpay App, HK and Mainland Alipay and HK and Mainland WeChat as fallbacks). A Meituan terminal was brought to the table but the server can’t make Apple Pay Visa work. We tried inserting the card as a chip-present transaction instead, and lo and behold a DCC-free slip was produced: https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fly...95b7f7d9c.jpeg |
Mrs. Majuki and I are in Taiwan right now. I've noticed that National Credit Card Center is the one that does DCC. It's been a consistent 4% offer. For the most part, terminals are customer facing, but, for those that haven't been, the cashier has always offered a currency selection. The lack of a language barrier and cultural familiarity help, but I don't think that visitors would have issues either.
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I withdrew euros from an International Currency Exchange (ICE) branded ATM at DUB this morning, and the DCC offer was 14%. It was easy enough to opt out:
https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.fly...1672ea9687.jpg The ATM offered GBP and USD as well. I was curious about how it would do this and using what exchange rate, but I went through all of the options and was unable to see a way to withdraw anything other than euros with my USD denominated card. Has anyone ever used one of those ATMs that advertises the ability to dispense multiple currencies to get anything other than the local currency where the ATM is? |
Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 37294291)
Has anyone ever used one of those ATMs that advertises the ability to dispense multiple currencies to get anything other than the local currency where the ATM is?
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Originally Posted by percysmith
(Post 37294620)
HSBC HK and Hang Seng Bank in HK disperse USD/GBP/THB. But they do not take other banks' cards https://www.hangseng.com/en-hk/perso...-currency-atm/
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I am a Hang Seng customer, it'll be banknote rate
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New one for me. Finding tripla.ai is used as the booking engine and card processor by some hotels in Japan, "conveniently" offering a way to pre-pay for your hotel room in USD rather than pay in JPY at the hotel. At least one hotel wouldn't let me skip and pay on site or pay in JPY. I didn't understand what was happening so didn't get the precise numbers. (Yes, feeling dumb, but there was no option on that hotel.) Anyone know if they mark up and by how much vs normal Visa exchange rates?
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