Every seasoned traveler has made an overseas currency mistake. You can spend hours combing tips and still screw up somehow. You can limit yourself for these errors with the proper research. Here are a few mistakes I have made, and I hope they prevent a future traveler from making the same.
Here are five anecdotal stories from traveling overseas with a money travel tip interwoven because that is what you want.
Stupidly not knowing the currency entering Cambodia
All I had to do is log on to Yahoo and click a couple links to get the current currency in Cambodia before I left on a bus, but stupid me forgot. After the horrid border crossing, we got on the bus towards Siem Reap, and dude on the bus said they were going to take us to a currency exchange, which would offer us a better rate than banks in Siem Reap.
They exchanged our U.S. dollars to the sum of 200 riels for one usd. I found out later that 1. the exchange rate was 400 to one and 2. You can easily use U.S. dollars in small denominations anyway in Cambodia. Fortunately, I only exchanged $20.00, so I was only scammed about $10.00. Since then, I never enter a country now without this basic knowledge.
Living like a king in Poland
As a budget traveler, I try to live and travel frugally, so I can keep traveling. One difficult aspect to gauge is how much money to withdraw from my international bank account when I am just about to leave a country. I do not want to leave with an excess, nor do I want to have to withdraw more at the last moment. It is a difficult little cat and mouse game.
In Poland I over zlotnied where I had about $100.00 worth with one afternoon to spend it. That afternoon I lived like a king. I went to a really nice restaurant and ordered several drinks, appetizer, best entree, and a dessert. I of course tipped my waiter like a rock star.
Then I went to another café and ordered a couple of more drinks while waiting for my overnight train back to the Czech Republic. It was a fun guilt free experience although I wish I would not have converted so much in the first place. I felt actually rich for once and had a permanent grin on my face all afternoon.
Why you don’t take currency back home
On the other side of the trip in the Czech Republic, I brought over $100.00 of Czech krona back home. I deposited them in my bank, and they charged me a fee to convert to usd. It made me wish I had an offshore savings account in Prague, so I could find a way around these conversion fees.
Good to have Mastercard and Visa
When I arrived in Toronto for the TBEX Travel Blogging Conference, I had no money, and I needed to buy something to drink. Fortunately, the grocery store accepted Mastercard, but not Visa. It is best to have both in your wallet because you never know when traveling where only one is allowed.
Don’t draw out money in Vietnam when hung-over
Figuring out the money conversion after going through multiple countries is tough. It is even tougher when the amount is ridiculous. When I was in Vietnam the dong to usd conversion was like 1 -16,600.
I was in line for an ATM in Nha Trang, Vietnam. I had a rough night the evening before, and my mind was not working right. I wanted $100.00 U.S. dollars in dong, but I could not figure out how much that would be. I kept canceling my transaction. Finally, I figured it out, and I got my money after a more than five minute battle. I turned around and there were five travelers who had formed a line behind me and glared at my incompetence.
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To be quite honest, you don’t want to withdraw money in any country when you’re hungover – not just Vietnam. Been there. Done that.
Jason’s Travels recently posted..Kayaking in Hawaii
Yes, it is best to have your wits about you when making important financial transactions.
definitely need a visa or MC when travelling. totally agree 100% ted!
I think it is best to have both just in case one place/country does not use both.
I have never heard of any place in Canada not excepting Visa if they accept Mastercard – very weird. Finding an ATM with money in it was a feat in Argentina and Chile & they’d only let you get out a paltry amount so you could rack up the fees. Colombia was tough too and that’s why I end up walking around with $1000 worth of money when I go to South America.
People got scammed big time in Zambia – or maybe Malawi – but the currency was so big it was easy to lose track of decimal points. Sometimes a calculator sure comes in handy.
Leigh recently posted..A Phenomenal Kayaking Trip near Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia
I have seen it a lot in Europe, but that was many years ago. I am sure it was a fluke that it happened in Toronto, but I just used the scenario as an example of why it is a good idea to have both a Visa and a Mastercard in your wallet.
I did not have too much trouble finding an ATM in Guyana. There were not many around, but you only need one. I just made sure I took enough out in the capital to get me buy when I went into the interior.
You gave us some very good advice with this posting. I did not know that there were places that would take either MasterCard or Visa but not the other.
One thing I have learned regarding currency in a foreign land: Although hand signals may work well for communicating in a non-native language, hand signals DO NOT work with the ATM screens; it is best to be able to read in the language of the teller machines.
I guess there is always the joy of swapping 1 US dollar for 100 trillion Zimbabwe ones! Nothing like loading up a wheelbarrow full of money to buy a loaf of bread!
Anthony The Travel Tart recently posted..Tongue Twisters – Funny African Languages