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U.K. Cash/Credit Cards In The Republic

kah22
kah22 Posts: 1,879 Forumite
Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper I've been Money Tipped!
Hi, I’ll be visiting the Rep late this week to late next week. I’ll have several largish bills to pay, we’re talking cc €1000 in total plus day to day spending. It’s the major spend I’m wondering about

I seem to have a number of options:
Bring, say €1200 with me from the North and pay the big bills in cash, plus it will give me some spends (seems sensible)
Ring £ Sterling with me and pay with it where possible
Pay with my Debit or Credit Card, but I understand there will be a charge over and above the commission rate. (Am I right?)

What’s the best option/options

Kevin
«1

Comments

  • guiriman
    guiriman Posts: 537 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Name Dropper
    kah22 wrote: »
    Pay with my Debit or Credit Card, but I understand there will be a charge over and above the commission rate. (Am I right?)


    Depends what type of card you have. If you're able to pay your bills electronically then you should probably open a Starling account as it has zero commission and zero charges.
  • Probably limited options given the tight time frame but would recommend the Halifax clarity credit card. No fees on non-sterling transactions and with it being MasterCard you get probably the best exchange rate available.
  • kah22
    kah22 Posts: 1,879 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper I've been Money Tipped!
    edited 31 July 2018 at 9:38PM
    I have an M&S MasterCard. All my Card is paid off automatically at the end of the month, never paid a penny in interest

    Guiriman can you explain what you mean by opening a sterling account, I!!!8217;m living in the North not the Republic. I!!!8217;m confused
  • In_For_A_Penny_2
    In_For_A_Penny_2 Posts: 345 Forumite
    edited 31 July 2018 at 10:03PM
    kah22 wrote: »
    I have an M&S MasterCard. All my Card is paid off automatically at the end of the month, never paid a penny in interest

    This charges a foreign transaction fee of almost 3%.
  • guiriman
    guiriman Posts: 537 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Name Dropper
    kah22 wrote: »
    Guiriman can you explain what you mean by opening a sterling account, I!!!8217;m living in the North not the Republic. I!!!8217;m confused


    Best explained here: https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/credit-cards/travel-credit-cards/#starling




    It's a bank account you manage from an app, but they also send you a physical bank card. No foreign exchange fees. You can use the electronic part straight away so it may give you a solution as you won't get a card in time. (It's actually a pretty good long-term solution though)
  • CEON44
    CEON44 Posts: 487 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    Too late now to apply but Halifax clarity CC is the way to go. Zero fees and probably best conversion rate. I use it anytime I go over the border and on foreign holidays. Dont think there is anything better out there.
    I started out with nothing......And still have most of it left:p
  • guiriman
    guiriman Posts: 537 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Name Dropper
    The Horizon card from MBNA is better as it also has 0.5% cashback. How you get one though I don't know as I don't think it's generally available, I got one by them shutting down by United card, that was the replacement
  • dmxdave
    dmxdave Posts: 1,608 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts
    guiriman wrote: »
    Depends what type of card you have. If you're able to pay your bills electronically then you should probably open a Starling account as it has zero commission and zero charges.
    Thanks for the tip, Opened a Starling account, apart from the obvious the app is great, We settled a hotel bill in ROI, the hotel asked if we wanted to convert to Sterling or pay in Euro, Their conversion worked out at £298, Starling was £277.......
    Dave
  • BigAl94
    BigAl94 Posts: 1,919 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    Revolut or Monzo for future use, no fees in any country
  • BigAl94 wrote: »
    Revolut or Monzo for future use, no fees in any country

    Monzo only allows cash withdrawals of £200 per month fee free though - that's no use for withdrawing currency on holiday. I switched to Starling from Monzo and they work exactly the same only there's no limit on cash withdrawals across a month (except for obviously needing to have the funds in place!)
    "I cannot make my days longer so I strive to make them better." Paul Theroux
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