If you are an American (USA) travelling abroad, fees for using foreign currencies can quickly add up. Foreign exchange (FX) fees, travellers checks and bank fees are just part of it! Here are a few ways you can avoid these extra charges.
Note: Your situation may vary, check first that these options are best for you. Information was correct at time of writing, but verify anything directly with the financial provider.
Not American? Check out my Australian and UK recommendations!
Debit/credit
Regardless of bank, debit or credit – not all providers are the same. The big three are Visa, Mastercard and American Express. Amex is big in the USA and moderately accepted in Australia, but is almost never possible to use South East Asia (except in high-end western stores). Mastercard is widely accepted – but Visa… Visa is king.
Visa is the most accepted method in South America and South East Asia. Some ATMs in the Philippines will only work with Visa debit cards, for example. Be aware of this when picking a card. Having multiple cards through different providers is recommended, in case one network is down.
Accessing Cash
Need cash? Go to any ATM with Charles Schwab! Never use travel cards.
Charles Schwab
https://www.schwab.com/checking
This is easily the best recommendation, thanks to the ATM fee refunds, zero fees and is Visa-based.
Account name: High Yield Investor Checking
Fees: none. No fees of any kind.
Bonuses: Refunds all ATM fees. This is a huge benefit.
Requirements: None.
Card type: Visa
Capital One
https://www.capitalone.com/bank/checking-accounts/online-checking-account/
This is suitable as a back-up account, but isn’t as good as Charles Schwab’s High Yield Investor Checking account.
Account name: 360 Checking
Fees: none.
Bonuses: none.
Requirements: None.
Card type: Mastercard
Fidelity
https://www.fidelity.com/cash-management/fidelity-cash-management-account
This is suitable as a back-up account, but isn’t as good as Charles Schwab’s High Yield Investor Checking account.
Account name: Cash Management Account
Fees: 1% foreign transaction fee. Otherwise, none.
Bonuses: Refunds all ATM fees. This is brilliant, but beware of the 1% foreign transaction fee.
Requirements: None.
Card type: Visa
Credit Cards
Bank of America
https://www.bankofamerica.com/credit-cards/products/travel-rewards-credit-card/
A free card that doesn’t charge you anything AND gives you points? This is a great offer as long as you pay your bill each month.
Account name: Bank of America Travel Rewards
Fees: none.
Bonuses: 55 days interest free period. 25,000 points on sign up ($1000 spend in 90 days), 1.5 points per $1.
Card type: Visa
Transfering Money
If you have large money to send, like paying a big hotel or dive trip bill, Transferwise is almost always the best option by far.
Transferwise
http://transferwise.com/u/michaelf713
Fees: varies based on country
Send money internationally for a fraction of the bank or Western Union rates. Can send from a variety of sources – even pay by credit card (might be cheaper than some overseas credit card rates!)
First time is for free! (the first $611USD is, anyway)
Canada
For those further North, options are more limited.
Stack
This is a bit different. This is pre-paid Mastercard. So, it acts like debit card (but uses the credit system).
Account name: Stack (they only have the one product).
Fees: none. Free ATM withdrawals and no FX fees.
Bonuses: Discounts at a wide variety of shops (see their website). Get $15 for each referral (and your referrals get $5 themselves)
Card type: Mastercard