Hi all, I've done a search and it seems a lot of travel card threads are old and closed, so can I ask the brains trust, which are the preferred cards for a 21 YO student (works part time) to get to travel around Europe (mainly Spain/Portugal/Germany).
It doesn't need to have credit facilities, but rather something that limits the transaction costs and perhaps can be loaded in Euros now in case the dollar drops further (the travel is in November). We did have an Ozforex card, but that's now discontinued.
Also, what's the cheapest way to exchange AUD to Euros to put on the card?
When using a travel card the way they make money is on the conversion, so there will be no "cheapest" way, there is only the card's way. That's where they sting you, as well as some assorted other fees.
You'd have to be a big bear on the Aussie to think we are going to lose too much vs EUR at this current level, especially enough to make back the fees on the card. I would suggest 28 degrees MC is the best choice in the short term but you may win or lose.
If locked into a travel card, I believe the Aus post card was offering ok value on a relative basis. All travel debit cards can be loaded in foreign currency, that's the point of them. Most limit the currencies on offer but you can get away with EUR in all of W. Europe really, including Czech Republic and lots of Switzerland but not UK generally.
If you are comparing all institution offered cards that people on this forum use for travel, then they roughly fall into 3 categories:
1. Credit card- either FX fee free or decent points for fx purchases. Recommend BW plat or 28 degrees for FX free. Citi sig or prestige for points.
2. Cash access, FX/fee free but not pre-converted. 28 degrees, ING and Citi debit plus. Citi card is the hands down winner, not locked into any $, no fees by Citi, direct on the day XE.com rate (not exactly but close enough). 28 degrees charges 3% fee for cash advance now, ING has a flat fee IIRC. Note that the Citi product is a savings card, not a CC so is very safe to use and not overspend. ING I would have to check, I've never used it.
3. "Travel cards". These are loaded in a foreign currency at a shockingly poor rate, with ++ fees all over the place. Benefit is that they do lock in the rate so if you bought at 0.9USD then you'd be laughing now that you just barely made your money back