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I have an ordinary credit card. Whenever I pay with this card in foreign currency (other than PLN, Polish złoty) I loose a lot of money due to unfavorable rates specified by my bank.

I need to buy GBP in London.

Is it possible for the currency exchange to charge my card in PLN, so I am not affected by unfavorable rates specified by my bank? How do I do this?

Note: I do not pay anything "extra" for paying in foreign currency, the only downside are the unfavorable rates.

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    Get a better bank. A good one gives you the full current exchange rate. Commented Oct 27, 2017 at 19:47

2 Answers 2

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I have sorted possible solutions from best to worst.

Use a GBP account in Polish bank and debit card

In several Polish banks you will be able to open a GBP account and a debit card will be issued for you. At T-mobile Usługi Bankowe, the yearly cost of such an account & debit card is 10 PLN (about GBP 2), so it is close to nothing. When transferring PLNs to GBP account, you should consider using an online currency exchange platform like Walutomat. The exchange rates are much better (at T-mobile: 5.02 PLN/GBP, at Walutomat: 4.79PLN/GBP) and the transfers are almost instant. There is a commission on Walutomat's services, about 0.2% AFAIR.

Note: I am not affiliated with Walutomat or T-mobile Usługi Bankowe, in any other way than being their happy customer :)

Note 2: You need to check at the T-mobile Usługi Bankowe if you can open only the GBP account, or do you need a standard PLN account too. You might be charged for the PLN account if you don't use it, so please check against the banking fees table.

You can try an ATM with dynamic currency conversion

Some ATMs will offer you an exchange rate in your card's currency (PLN). The ATM will display you the exchange rate and the exact amount of PLNs that will be deducted from your account (excluding ATM withdrawal fees, if applicable). If your exchange rate is REALLY bad, this may be a good option. Although the exchange rates at the ATM had been really bad for several years (comparing to my bank), I have found out recently that they are slightly better now. You should be aware of the market/real exchange rate before using this option, however, it may be good for you.

Pay for your purchases by card and use the dynamic currency conversion

Some terminals in shops will also have the possibility to charge you in PLN, however, not all of them, and with every purchase you will need to check the currency rates. It is not comfortable at all, unless you plan to make a one large purchase with your PLNs.

Bring cash

If any of these solutions does not suit you, you can always bring cash to the UK. Naturally, this is not the best solution (that is why it is the last one in my answer), and you would have to predict how much money you would need. The exchange rates in Polish exchange booths (except for airports and tourist spots) are acceptable and should be better than your bank's.

The currency exchange booths do not have card terminals

I do not believe or recall a currency exchange anywhere in Europe that is equipped with a credit/debit card terminal, so that you can be charged in your local currency (PLN), and be given cash in the exchange's local currency (GBP). Even if that was possible, the card processing cost (which may vary 1-5%) would be transferred to you (by giving you a bad exchange rate).

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Is it possible for the currency exchange to charge my card in PLN, so I am not affected by unfavorable rates specified by my bank?

Yes, certain shops and ATMs (but not currency exchange booths) can indeed charge your card in your home currency, however that exchange rate is usually worse than what you would've paid at your bank for a transaction in foreign currency.

However there is a solution to your needs and that is to open a virtual bank account at Revolut. Once you receive the card you can top it up in PLN (or EUR, USD, CHF GBP, etc) and then spend the money from the card (or withdraw it at ATMs) at interbank exchange rates. The account is completely free apart from a small delivery fee, although there is a 200 GBP/month limit on free ATM withdrawals, after which they will charge you 0.5%. Revolut works for almost every currency pair worldwide and I highly recommend it to anyone traveling outside their country's currency zone. This is a more convenient solution than bothering with Walutomat as suggested by @Edmund since you can do everything with one click rather than involving a third-party service.

Disclaimer: I don't work for Revolut and in no way associated with their company.

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    Have you actually used Revolut? I downloaded the app and it tells me it's about to go into early access, so seems to me it's not actually available yet? What have I missed?
    – Midavalo
    Commented Oct 27, 2017 at 14:28
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    @Midavalo I'm using it every day. Just sign up and wait for your account to be approved. I think it takes around a week.
    – JonathanReez
    Commented Oct 27, 2017 at 14:31
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    It turns out that Revolut is only available to residents in the EU currently.
    – Midavalo
    Commented Oct 27, 2017 at 14:45
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    @Midavalo As long as you have an EU address for shipping the card it will work. And they're expanding to North America soon.
    – JonathanReez
    Commented Oct 27, 2017 at 14:59
  • Can I use my mobile phone with Revolut app to imitate a credit card thanks to NFC? Commented Oct 27, 2017 at 20:21

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