
When using bank cards or withdrawing cash abroad, you often face additional costs like conversion fees and hidden charges. The goal of this article is to show how to avoid paying for currency conversion using effective financial strategies and tools.
You’ll learn:
- why banks and ATMs apply conversion fees;
- how to recognize dynamic currency conversion (DCC);
- which cards and accounts are most cost-effective for travel;
- how to minimize costs when withdrawing cash;
- how to avoid double conversion.

2. Why Banks and ATMs Charge Fees
2.1 Types of Fees
- Hidden margin (FX markup) – a surcharge on the interbank exchange rate (usually ~1%).
- Foreign Transaction Fee (FTF) – 2–3% charged on cross-border card purchases.
- DCC (Dynamic Currency Conversion) – converting purchases into your home currency at the point of sale, with a markup of 3–7% or more.
- ATM Fee – a flat or percentage-based withdrawal fee, often set by the ATM operator.
2.2 Common Cost Example
Transaction Type | Bank Fee | FX Margin | DCC Surcharge | Total Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|
Paying in local currency (FTF card) | 2% | 1% | – | ~3% |
Paying with DCC (home currency offered) | 2% | – | 5% | ~7% |
ATM withdrawal abroad | 2% + $5 | 1% | – | ~3% + fixed |
3. What Is DCC and How to Spot It
3.1 Definition
Dynamic Currency Conversion (DCC) is a service where the terminal offers to charge you in your home currency instead of the local currency. The exchange rate is set by the merchant, not your bank.
3.2 Why It’s Expensive
DCC rates are often inflated. For example, instead of €1 = $1.06, the rate might be €1 = $1.10. The average markup is 5–7%, sometimes higher.
3.3 How to Recognize DCC at Checkout or ATM
- The terminal shows the amount in your home currency, even abroad.
- Exchange rates or conversion fees appear in small print, often after you’ve made a choice.
- The option “Pay in USD (or your currency)” is highlighted or presented as “recommended.”
4. How Not to Pay for Currency Conversion When Using a Card
4.1 Always Choose Local Currency
When you choose to pay in local currency, the transaction is converted at the Visa or Mastercard exchange rate, often with a small FX margin (~1%). This is usually the most cost-effective method.
4.2 Use Cards with No Foreign Transaction Fees
Many cards (e.g., Capital One, Charles Schwab, Revolut, Wise, Halifax Clarity) waive foreign transaction fees completely. This eliminates the typical 2–3% fee on international purchases.
4.3 Multi-Currency Cards and Accounts
Providers like Revolut and Wise allow users to hold and spend in multiple currencies. You can pay directly in local currency, avoiding both FX markups and conversion fees.
5. How to Avoid Double Currency Conversion
5.1 What Is It?
Double conversion happens when your currency is converted into an intermediary one (e.g., RUB → USD → EUR), often due to DCC or card routing policies. This leads to compounded fees and losses.
5.2 How to Avoid It
- Keep balances in the currency of your destination.
- Use multi-currency cards that support direct local payments.
- Decline DCC offers and select “local currency” during payment or withdrawal.
6. Avoiding Fees When Withdrawing Cash Abroad
6.1 Withdraw from Fee-Free Accounts
If you have a card with no foreign transaction or withdrawal fees, you can use international ATMs with minimal cost — especially if your bank reimburses third-party ATM charges.
6.2 Tips for Lower Fees
- Withdraw larger sums less frequently to minimize fixed ATM fees.
- Avoid ATMs at airports and hotels; they often charge the highest surcharges.
- Use bank-owned ATMs, especially those that are partners of your bank.
6.3 Example
Withdrawing €300:
- Standard card: ~€9 in fees
- Fee-free card: ~€1–€2 (ATM operator fee only)
7. Table: Comparing Currency Conversion Methods
Method | FX Markup | FTF | DCC Risk | Benefits | Drawbacks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paying in local currency | ~1% | Varies | Low | Best exchange rate, avoids DCC | Requires awareness at checkout |
No FTF card | ~1% | 0% | Low | Convenient for travelers | ATM and FX fees may still apply |
Multi-currency card/account | 0–1% | 0% | Low | Direct currency usage, transparent rates | Limited free withdrawals, top-up limits |
ATM withdrawal with fee-free card | – | 0% | Low | Cash access with minimal loss | May still face ATM fees |
Paying using DCC | – | – | High | Looks convenient | Often adds 5–12% to total cost |
8. Choosing the Right Tools
8.1 Bank Cards
Some of the best no-FTF options include:
- Capital One Quicksilver / Venture
- Charles Schwab Debit Card
- Barclaycard Rewards / Halifax Clarity (UK)
- Revolut / Wise (multi-currency)
Be sure to verify:
- FX margin policy
- ATM withdrawal fees
- Daily limits and restrictions
8.2 Multi-Currency Accounts
Wise — interbank exchange rates, with free withdrawals up to £200/month
Revolut — favorable rates, free ATM withdrawals up to a monthly limit, then low fees
8.3 ATM Withdrawals
- Use bank-affiliated ATMs
- Choose local currency to disable DCC
- Avoid conversion offers at ATMs
9. On-the-Ground Behavior: Avoiding DCC
- At shops and restaurants, always select “Pay in Local Currency.”
- At ATMs, decline offers to convert into your home currency.
- Disable DCC in your banking app if that feature exists.
- Use exchange rate tracking apps to verify if offers are fair.
10. Real-World Example
Imagine you’re in Spain:
- A €3 coffee:
- With DCC → $3.30
- Without DCC → ~$3.18 (actual bank rate)
- Withdrawing €200:
- At airport ATM → €6 in fees
- With Revolut or Wise → free or ~€2 max, depending on tier and ATM
11. Legal Protections and Transparency
- Visa and Mastercard require merchants to display conversion rates during DCC.
- In the EU, Regulation 2019/518 ensures full disclosure of exchange costs.
- In Australia, DCC practices have faced regulatory scrutiny due to hidden charges.
12. Summary
To avoid paying for currency conversion, follow these key principles:
- Always choose local currency when paying or withdrawing.
- Use cards without foreign transaction fees or multi-currency cards.
- Be cautious with ATMs; prefer those of major banks.
- Decline DCC every time it’s offered.
- Monitor exchange rates with reliable apps.
Following these practices significantly reduces unnecessary costs and improves your travel budgeting experience.
Links
- Dynamic Currency Conversion explained – Wikipedia
- Cards without foreign transaction fees – The Points Guy