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Best credit cards for travelers

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Credit card and ATM questions arise from time to time.  Thought it might be helpful if members post info on cards they find good deals for travelers.

 

Benefits associated with the Amazon Rewards Visa Card (issued by Chase Bank, USA):

 

- No annual fee

- No international transaction fees

- 3% back on Amazon purchases

- 2% back on restaurant, drugstore and gas station purchases

- 1% back on all other purchases

 

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The opening post may be of interest to the many US readers here.   Maybe the interest rate could be of use ?

 

 

For  UK readers, the Halifax Clarity credit card is good.

 

No international transaction fees (typically 2.75%+ with debit & credit cards from other banks)

No fees for foreign currency withdrawals (typically 2.75%+ with the others)

No annual fee

1% interest rate

 

To minimize interest paid, it's possible to log onto your bank account and make an immediate payment to the credit card.

 

You still have to pay the unreasonable Thai ATM fees for foreign cards, so a Thai bank account usually is cheaper.

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What Vinapu quotes is in fact cheaper than the vast majority of card withdrawals.  

 

Which is why I actually take cash as well, leaving credit cards purely a back up.

 

 

My total transaction losses when handing over notes with her majesty the Queen on & getting Thai baht in return amounted to 0.4% on the recent trip.

 

If you withdraw 20,000 baht cash from a Thai ATM card with the typical UK card, you lose 2.75% + 150 baht for the ATM, or whatever it is now.   So total losses about 3.5%.    Visa or Mastercard also take a small cut, but this is almost nothing.

 

Even if using a Halifax Clarity card & logging onto your UK bank to pay it off immediately (avoiding any of the 1% a month interest), the extortionate Thai ATM fees make taking cash more economic.

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Cash is best for me, the card is used to pay for hotels and as back up in case of unforeseen expenses 

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But from the other side....many of us have cards that have no foreign transaction fees and don’t have to pay the Thai bank ATM fees.

So again it’s not a one size fits all. We all have different situations.

nobody suggested otherwise but discussion above is very useful just to show what we need to watch,

 

exchange rates and transaction fees feature prominently in those calculations.

 

Sometimes my not be fees to pay but rate may be poorer than on cash exchange, for some it may be more advisable to buy domestically USD and exchange them into Thai baht / my case, although  difference is narrowing to almost nil / , others may find most efficient to change their domestic currency direct .

 

Even place when we exchange money may make quite q difference if amount is substantial.  

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