It’s a decent card, it really depends on your needs and how much you travel (and hence actually use the card). For me I’m prepared to pay some annual fee to get some points and travel insurance but I’m travelling a lot more now in retirement and hence both can use the insurance and have a sizeable overseas spend.
I've just discovered a downside to the Bankwest Zero Platinum card. Any additional cardholder gets a card with the same card number as the primary cardholder. If for any reason (lost card, stolen card, etc) a card lock is applied to one card it locks all cards. Not a good outcome if this is your only credit card whilst travelling. This "feature" really detracts from the usefulness of this card for overseas travel.Best Credit Cards for Overseas Travel & Online Shopping is an article written by AFF editorial staff:
Best Credit Cards for Overseas Travel & Online Shopping
Save on international transaction fees when you travel overseas or shop online with 28 Degrees and other Australian credit cards.www.australianfrequentflyer.com.au
You can leave a comment or discuss this topic below.
First post when you joined over 10 years ago. Welcome to posting.I've just discovered a downside to the Bankwest Zero Platinum card. Any additional cardholder gets a card with the same card number as the primary cardholder. If for any reason (lost card, stolen card, etc) a card lock is applied to one card it locks all cards. Not a good outcome if this is your only credit card whilst travelling. This "feature" really detracts from the usefulness of this card for overseas travel.
Fair enough but my point still remains, ie choose another card which does have travel insurance if the value of this (for you) exceeds the fees charged.From the BW website:
“From 3 September 2024, we’re removing the complimentary insurance cover from Zero Platinum credit cards.”
Given the trigger for CC TI is usually the spend on some flights out etc, it probably doesn’t matter as much?Fair enough but my point still remains, ie choose another card which does have travel insurance if the value of this (for you) exceeds the fees charged.
Sure enough but again as per my original point it really depends on your own needs. For some people with considerable spend you can probably justify two annual fees but that’s not everyone.Given the trigger for CC TI is usually the spend on some flights out etc, it probably doesn’t matter as much?
I rarely rely on CC TI but I’d probably be using another points earn card to book flights out of Oz. Save the int fee free card for just the FOREX stuff.
Why?Not a fan of currency cards where you preloaded a specif currency.
This is currently under discussion on the Whirlpool finance forum. Many people are reporting long delays with applications for the Bendigo card.What is best card / ecard for international currency?
Why?
I’m a fan of the CBA Travel Money Card (TMC) (VISA Debit Card).masterProzac traveling soon. What is best card / ecard for international currency?
Currently looking at Bendigo Mastercard travel wallet, the CBA equivalent (seems to have a few fees), WISE, Coles Rewards Mastercard.
Pros / cons.
and you can still earn interest on your cash, especially on accounts with linked high interest saver accounts (eg ING, UBank, MacBank).With a debit card that is fee free, your money is held as AUD and you get the mastercard/visa rate at the time of purchase (or atm withdrawal in the rare event you need cash). So if rate improves whilst you are away you benefit, and there aren't conversion fees.
The FOREX rate difference between Wise and the decent DC options is actually marginal.So you get a foreign currency preload debit card, such as the Wise card, and you only load A$'s. No matter what currency you use the debit card for Wise does the conversion from the A$'s held in the account at the current mid-market rate applicable at the time of the transaction, with a very reasonable conversion fee that is more favourable than the credit card companies apply, or build in to their exchange rate. When you do not want to use the card any more you transfer any A$'s balance back to your normal bank account.
Yes, the Macquarie debit card is virtually indistinguishable from the Wise rate (unlike the bank foreign currency cards which have a 3% mark-up); and also you can set any withdrawal limit you like.The FOREX rate difference between Wise and the decent DC options is actually marginal.
Exactly, with Macquarie no hurdles (no minimum deposit per month, no fees, no penalties for making withdrawals) and one of the best interest rates around (no need to even transfer from a linked savings except to perhaps limit the balance in case of a lost card). Plus a very good app compared with other banks, that doesn't require you to have mobile coverage to do MFA.I’d rather be earning 5.5% interest on my cash until I need to spend it.
yes Wise has a $350 limit on daily withdrawals but who on earth needs more than that cash per day these days? With a Bit of planning ahead will get you $700 in your pocket without too much problem.Happy to be corrected but Wise has some pretty restrictive daily caps on ATM cash withdrawals (only a tiny AU$350/day), if you exceed that daily limit they charge $1.50 +1.75% fee on the amount over the limit. So if you are somewhere where cash is king, it can be problematic / expensive to get the cash you may need.
Not me but looking at the cash thread on AFF plenty seem to burn through that and more.yes Wise has a $350 limit on daily withdrawals but who on earth needs more than that cash per day these days?
I'll take great interest earn whilst I'm travelling (vs none on Wise) over holding multiple currencies, preferring to only convert exactly what I spend at time of purchase.All cards have their virtues and vices.
Not that much! - per day? except for maybe stuff like one off tour payments. And as I said, you can plan ahead for that.Not me but looking at the cash thread on AFF plenty seem to burn through that and more.