I've used my Citibank Plus travel card in Bali and Europe more recently with no issues. I'd get the Citi app and also take another card or 2 to try if the Citi fails and you need a backup.
the customers no longer need notify the bank about overseas travel.
I always have two cards on me, and two back in the hotel safe - just in case.I've used my Citibank Plus travel card in Bali and Europe more recently with no issues. I'd get the Citi app and also take another card or 2 to try if the Citi fails and you need a backup.
That is truly bizarre.Hah! Even when you did have to notify, makes no difference. I stuck my card in a midtown Manhattan Citi ATM at a Citi branch and managed one withdrawal. They then froze my card. Citi US insisted I call AU to fix, incurring charges. On a later trip spent $12 at Price Rite supermarket, which Citi deemed 'suspicious'. Yes, another call back to AU to fix, 30 mins on the phone. Then on yet another trip, this time to the UK my entire online account got locked. The One Time Pin was working for me to that point, to conduct online EFTs, however they changed their app and of course registration changed back to my AU phone number. Another fail. I've really enjoyed fee-free banking with Citi, but there has been a cost.
That is truly bizarre.
Did this major problem you had occur this year after they changed the notification rules as a customer service?
when I go to Citi Australia, but I can't post a link as it opens in a protected browser window for me and I can't copy/paste!
like the old key chain token that CBA had
Citibank did advise customers in writing about this. Either a letter directly or statement attachment, I forget which, and I suspect both. There was a big song and dance about it.Then I did a search for overseas travel notification, which came up with the result that, as a service to customers, the customers no longer need notify the bank about overseas travel.
So, one lands overseas, tries to use the card at an ATM or hotel or shop, the card doesn't work, one has to stuff around for minutes.getting the card to work - possibly with a queue behind one - and hopefully get the card to work.
if anyone heads overseas without roaming activated on their regular number is asking for trouble. So many online activities now require confirmation codes sent by SMS for verification.This only works if one has one's own phone with international roaming
That doesnt change a thing. Even if you did advise overseas travel They still would try to contact you if they suspect any transactions, and if you didnt answer, the card is blocked. Happened to me twice.As far as I'm concerned, it was much simpler in the past where I just rang them up and said I was going to use the card overseas.
but I suspect that many people who read what I read at their site - and follow it - will wind up in strife.
Citibank did advise customers in writing about this. Either a letter directly or statement attachment, I forget which, and I suspect both. There was a big song and dance about it.
Citibank doesnt block your card *before* you use it, so that scenario is just plain sillly. In any case, dont leave home without a 2nd payment card, and a 3rd. (I take about 5)
if anyone heads overseas without roaming activated on their regular number is asking for trouble. So many online activities now require confirmation codes sent by SMS for verification.
I've sent Citibank a message today asking exactly how do I get this process to work, as I don't have an Australian phone that works in Indonesia. I go to indonesia all the time and dont have any such problems.
That doesnt change a thing. Even if you did advise overseas travel They still would try to contact you if they suspect any transactions, and if you didnt answer, the card is blocked. Happened to me twice.
It makes no difference at all that you dont have to ring them. Except for the fact that you dont have to ring them.
I suspect thats not the case at all. Just because we dont ring them, it doesnt mean that as soon as you start using the card overseas that they will consider it 'suspicious' and try to contact you. Using a card in an ATM or POS is NOT suspicious, it is in fact quite normal and expected.
the only times Citibank has ever contacted me, is when makiing payments to an online travel agent.
I wonder how everyone else knew about it. You probably should raise a complaint with Citibank about how they are notifiying you.Let's see
First you say Citibank did advise me of this in writing. No they did not.
Or that they may have stuck it on an electronic statement attachment - rather than as a separate Email with a title describing the change. You call that a notification?
I never said that.Then you say everyone should have to take a post paid mobile phone overseas just for SMS's
I have a prepaid mobile. Roaming works fine.- as if that is a reasonable requirement, when half the population is probably on pre-paid mobile which doesn't have international roaming.
I never said that.You seem to think that people should get a post paid Sim plan at great expense, just to get an SMS from Citibank while they travel.
I already explained why your hypothetical scenario is silly - it doesnt happenThen you say my statement is "just plain silly" without having read responses by others on this thread, where what I suspected could happen to people actually DID happen to them. How exactly is my statement silly when, as it turns out it describes reality?
I never asserted that at all. They plainly dont do that.And then you assert that somehow, if I've notified Citibank that I am going to be in another country using the old method, that they would suddenly get suspicious and start blocking the card and trying to ring me, when I use the card exactly as I previously advised them.
I was called because it was a suspicicous transaction to them, the fact that i was overseas at the time was irrellevant - which is a point I already made. Neither was a normal every day transaction like using an ATM or at a merchant.And then you say the opposite. And you say you've been rung twice by them when overseas.
there is no stuffing around. Just go overseas and use the card.Somehow, you seem to think all this stuffing around with a card when travelling overseas - which up till now has never happened to me - is fine and acceptable practice.
I can see why.Quite frankly, I find you positions mystifying.
You seem to like saying "I never said that", without stating what it was you said that you think I misinterpretted.I wonder how everyone else knew about it. You probably should raise a complaint with Citibank about how they are notifiying you.
I never said that.
I have a prepaid mobile. Roaming works fine.
I never said that.
I already explained why your hypothetical scenario is silly - it doesnt happen
I never asserted that at all. They plainly dont do that.
I was called because it was a suspicicous transaction to them, the fact that i was overseas at the time was irrellevant - which is a point I already made. Neither was a normal every day transaction like using an ATM or at a merchant.
there is no stuffing around. Just go overseas and use the card.
I can see why.
The simple fact is, nothing has changed. Even when Citibank required you to notifify them of Overseas travel, If they think a transaction is suspicious, they will contact you. If you dont answer, they will block your card. End of story.
The only thing that has changed is you dont have to notify them. If you use the card as a normal person would, then its not going to be suspicious.
You seem to like saying "I never said that", without stating what it was you said that you think I misinterpretted.
If you are using the phone application, then register for their 'token' (if you have updated the application recently, it will push the 'token' a fair bit). It obviates the need for getting One Time Pins via digital data or wi-fi, which is what I think you are talking about. You can do it with your laptop if you can get some free wi-fi at a hotel or coffee shop.
Amazing!!!!I dont have to state what i said, when I already said it. You have equivocated on every point I made, so your answers are just a strawman. So in respect of everything else, my answer is still "i never said that"
If you have an issue with any single comment I made, do the polite thing and quote it, and respond accordingly, rather than incorrectly paraphrasing me.
Well, quite frankly, this wouldn't be a worthless piece of advice actually. I believe you said you were with Virgin Mobile? So was I. I changed when it became too obvious that Virgin doesn't want pre-paid customers and was progressively making their offerings less + less competitive to hopefully either get them to convert to contract or shed them altogether. I chose the later option and have moved to Aldimobile instead. I have a friend who is a 737 captain for VAH who made the same switch just before me who went with Amaysim instead.I thought that your next response was to recommend that people change their pre-paid phone operators so that they can receive OTPs from Citibank.