I searched and found a thread, but my situation is different. Plus that thread is 5 years old-I am working an internship here in Europe and getting paid in cash. Its only for 10 more weeks, but I'm curious as to the best way to convert whatever I have left back into USD. I found travelex from the other thread,http://www.travelex.combut they don't list their rates on their website and I would have to go to a store location to do it, since they don't buy foreign currency online.I've learned airports are the absolute worst places to convert cash, and I should have a few hundred so I won't do that.I may have the option of giving the cash to a foreign relative, then he writes me a check, and I give it straight to my bank, but I haven't asked him about it yet.Thoughts?
6/14/2010 10:01:04 AM
when i lived in a small town in mexico for a summer, there were several places (not all one chain) to exchange money. are there not places like that there?the best way i found though was to deposit in an ATM to your account, then you don't have to deal with an exchange and it's just like depositing dollars.
6/14/2010 10:03:56 AM
6/14/2010 10:10:24 AM
traditionally poor rates^
6/14/2010 10:13:19 AM
Ahh. I thought that shit was the same across the board.Shows how much I know.
6/14/2010 10:15:56 AM
plus high 'convenience' fees.
6/14/2010 10:17:09 AM
Your best bet may be to get one of your coworkers to convert it at their bank.
6/14/2010 10:18:36 AM
6/14/2010 10:21:53 AM
Uh yeh, because your transaction has to go through a longer series of tubes and takes 0.0484848 milliseconds longer than an in-country transaction, we're going to need to charge you an international transaction fee.ugh. banks. those transactions really cost something like 18 cents. in-country, non-bank member, ATM transactions cost something like 13 cents and you get charged $2+ typically.
6/14/2010 10:33:04 AM
6/14/2010 10:40:04 AM
cool! maybe i can check it out on my way home today. deposit like 50€ and see what my bank statement says, or if it even comes up as an option at the ATM
6/14/2010 10:44:52 AM
if its only a couple hundred euro i would go ahead and spend it. bring back gifts and liquor/wine that you wouldnt normally be able to buy here
6/14/2010 11:12:53 AM
That's an idea, but I also need the money. Still working on that whole "find a job" thingThough I certainly will be buying gifts...just hope I don't run out of bag space, haha. I need to figure out the postal system here too...
6/14/2010 11:23:19 AM
I went to the SECU when I came home from Italy
6/14/2010 11:29:59 AM
when i came back last october my 2 bags each weighed 3x what they were supposed to and us air didnt charge me any extra. i had brought back a lot of shit
6/14/2010 11:30:22 AM
1. go to bank2. exchange money3. profit!Really, dont do it anywhere but a bank. here or there. Most banks can do this, but you might have to let them know a week or two in advance. Its probably easier since you want USD to do it here, rather than there, as the bank here has dollars, but would need to acquire dollars if you did it in europe still. also, banks have the best exchange rates, airports the worst, anywhere else... depends.
6/14/2010 11:41:18 AM
As far as I know Wachovia charges a minimum fee of 30 USD for currency conversion, so its a rip off too. Travelex and other airport types are major rip off. Can you buy travellers checks and cash them out in the US in dollars?[Edited on June 14, 2010 at 12:46 PM. Reason : a]
6/14/2010 12:44:44 PM
For the banks, I looked at my own bank (Navy Federal) and Bank of America. For Navy Fed, they don't do conversions, and BoA you have to be a member of the bank. I might be able to find a friend who is in with them, but that's beside the point. SECU might work, I think my g/f is a member there.^^^Weight wouldn't be an issue, space would be I already used vacuum bags to pack my stuff and there wasn't much room left already.^I don't know much about traveler's checks, especially here, but that's worth an investigation.
6/14/2010 2:24:35 PM
where in Europe are you? i've had different experiences in different places
6/15/2010 4:21:52 PM
I'm in Belgium
6/15/2010 4:59:53 PM
Why can't you deposit it into your bank in the United States? Is that something that typically isn't done?
6/15/2010 5:09:35 PM
I'll email the bank and see what they say. I don't really need the physical cash converted, I just need it to go into my bank account one way or anotherApparently not, since I got a canned answer back from Navy Fed when I emailed them this:
6/16/2010 4:15:24 PM
Hey what about USAA? Do you qualify for an account there? Then you could just mail a check (or checks) to them for deposit. I'm pretty sure they even refund foreign ATM transaction fees up to 15/month.
6/16/2010 8:44:11 PM
I'd have bmel check into the SECU, they are typically really good about perks for members because they are non-profit. Its a shame that you don't actually have an account with them, because they don't charge any transaction fees for ATM deposits no matter whose they are (you are still subject to that bank or ATM's rates and fees though, they range from free to $10 in the US)Now that I've contributed something, I won't feel bad about making a joke in the lounge:
6/16/2010 10:30:39 PM
Hopefully bmel will see this and check SECU online to see if I can bring cash in or something to have it changed out.
6/17/2010 7:22:21 AM
Nvm...I see you're juSt figuring out logistics[Edited on June 17, 2010 at 8:14 AM. Reason : ]
6/17/2010 7:47:51 AM