The pound hits an eight year high buying €1.43 – here's how you get that rate
The pound's hit it's best rate against the euro for eight years, meaning holidaymakers tripping to Europe find it far cheaper than in recent memory. Currently it's hovering around £1 buys €1.43 - €1.44, a year ago it would've bought you just €1.24.
Yet these rates are the ones banks get, try and change your money and you get the far worse tourist rates... unless you follow these 10 tips below to maximise it.
1. Get near perfect rates in EVERY COUNTRY, EVERY TIME.
Specialist cheap overseas credit cards are usable in almost any country, and like any credit card, you just pay each month after you've spent. So pop it in your overseas wallet and use when needed, ensuring you repay IN FULL each month to minimise interest. Top pick is the Halifax Clarity* Mastercard credit card. Unlike most debit and credit cards, it doesn't add a 3% 'non-sterling transaction fee', so you get the same near perfect Mastercard (which usually pips Visa) wholesale rate banks do for the day. If you don't repay it in full it's 18.9% rep APR. It's not the only no-exchange fee card, and as you have to pass a credit check to get one, try our overseas cards eligibility calculator, which shows which you're most likely to get without hitting your credit file. Full help: Top Overseas Credit Cards guide (APR Examples).
2. Get a boosted £60 of euros for £50 prepaid card.
With prepaid cards, you load cash on them, then use them like a debit card. There's no credit check so anyone can get one unlike credit cards. Full help and best-buys in Cheap Prepaid Cards. Yet intro bonuses on two new cards effectively mean you get an even better rate than the banks get:
Perfect rates and £5 extra on £10+. The new Revolut prepaid Mastercard* gives the perfect interbank rate for euros, dollars and many others for the first year. That's unlikely to be sustainable, so if it can't find a way to make other revenue after (eg, cross-selling) it may add a fee (it'll notify you if so). Also, there are no ATM or spending fees.
Sign up via its app (Apple/Android), and the first 25,000 who use invitation code MSE, will get an extra £5 added when loading £10+. Full analysis:Revolut.
Urgent: £10 extra on £50+:WeSwap prepaid Mastercard* works in dollars, euros and others. The first 4,500 people who apply via our link get two perks:
a) An extra £10 of currency when loading £50 or more.
b) A better rate. Its best rate is if you can wait a week for your currency to convert, normally that's the perfect interbank rate + a 1% fee, but for those signing up via our link it's wiping this fee for the first year.
Spending's free, but there's a £1.10-£1.70 fee for sub-£200ish ATM withdrawals. Sign-up is via the website (and there's also an app if you want to control the card that way). Full analysis: WeSwap.
Important prepaid card info: a) These are new, untested cards to us. They should work but there's a small leap of faith here. For fully tried and tested, FairFX Euro* and FairFX Dollar* are free via these links if you load £50+ and give £8 on £500+.b) These usually arrive within 10 days, but can take longer.c) To be safe, only load cash on the cards if you'll use them soon.d) If the prepaid card provider goes bust, your money's ringfenced at a bank. Revolut and FairFX use Barclays, while WeSwap uses Barclays and NatWest. e) Unlike the others WeSwap's isn't UK-regulated, the card's issued by IDT, which is regulated in Gibraltar – so you're ultimately reliant on its regulations to protect you (a lot must go wrong though before this matters though).
3. Which wins? The top prepaid card or top credit card?
Normally it's credit cards hands down as the rate is better, but the two prepaid cards above may pip credit cards (but even on £1,000 it's likely to be by pennies). Here are the key pros and cons:
Prepaid cards need loading up, credit cards don't. Credit cards are simple as you use them when you need, with no inactivity fees.
Prepaid rate is when you load, credit card when you spend. This means with prepaid cards you're at the mercy of currency fluctuations – which can make you a winner if the rate gets worse, or a loser the other way round.
Credit cards give good rates in every country. With prepaid cards they're usually only good in the currencies specified.
Credit cards have Section 75 protection, prepaids don't. Pay for something costing £100-£30,000 on a credit card and the card firm's jointly liable with the retailer if things go wrong – useful abroad or on overseas websites as taking things back's tough. Full info: Section 75.
Credit cards charge interest on cash withdrawals even if you repay in full. Where possible spend on them rather than withdraw cash to avoid this.
4. Find the best rates for foreign cash in seconds.
If you want cold, hard cash, our TravelMoneyMax holiday money comparison tool compares over 40 bureaux to find the best rates.
5. Save £100 per €1,000 spending.
So how do all these methods compare? The cost of €1,000 on Monday 20 July (for the cards, based on five ATM withdrawals of €100 each, the rest spending in 20 transactions):
Using a top prepaid card (in first year): £697
Using a specialist credit card: £701 (more than prepay due to cash withdrawal interest)
Cash, via UK's cheapest bureau (pick up in London): £704
Cash from the Post Office: £710
Using a debit card from hell: £752
Change at airport (not pre-ordered): £792
Tourist rates can be rubbish, so here are our top 10 tips to max your euro rate
6. What does your card charge? Beware the debit cards from hell.
If you don't have time to get a new card before you go away, use the how good is your current plastic? checker so you can see what your card charges. The worst are the Overseas Debit Cards From Hell. Not only do they add a non-sterling transaction fee and an ATM fee, they also charge up to £1.50/time you use the card to spend overseas.
DO YOU HAVE A DEBIT CARD FROM HELL? Bank of Scotland | Halifax | Lloyds | Santander TSB | NatWest/RBS (hell for small spends)
ANY other card, including credit cards if repaid IN FULL, is cheaper to spend on than these. See full
info.
7. I'm not going yet, but since the rate's corking now, should I buy now?
It's a big question. For an answer, read my Worth snapping up €1.41 as the Greek crisis continues? (it was written a couple of weeks ago when the rate was slightly lower, but the principle still stands).
8. "Do you want to pay in pounds or euros?" – SAY EUROS.
When paying or even withdrawing cash, these days they often ask if you want to pay in pounds or the local currency. In general, always pay in local currency. If you select pounds, the overseas store/bank does the conversion, and rates tend to be awful.
Full info and explanation in my 'Pay in euros?' blog.
9. I'm going to Greece. Help.
Thankfully things in Greece have calmed down, though many still have worries. In most tourist spots we hear things are still working as normal. Tourists can take cash from ATMs (provided they still have cash in them) and most stores still accept cards for payment.
For safety though, take more than one payment method and enough euros for the whole holiday.
For full info see our Greek holiday worries FAQ and video.
10. What's in your overseas wallet?
Are you part of the 'overseas wallet or purse' club? I most certainly am. After all, there are some things you only need when abroad. The first are specialist credit cards – these tend to be pretty poor for UK use, so mine waits in the wallet till I go away. It shouldn't be lonely. There's also a free EHIC card for emergency medical issues in Europe, my ESTA number for US travel, leftover euros, dollars and more – feel free to take a peek inside my overseas travel wallet.
Far more help in our 16 Cheapest Ways To Get Travel Money guide.