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Using debit card in USA
I am going to USA for holiday. I have my dollars, but can I use my debit card over there in the stores?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Unlikely. Different states and different stores will have different rules which doesn't help. Also if there is fraudulent use, it will be way harder to deal with. My suggestion would be to use a credit card so that you have protection from the credit card and no one has direct access to your bank account.
Like this maestro card, mike ?? http://www.maestrocard.com/uk/
As far as the person working behind the till is concerned, there is no difference whatsoever between a credit card or debit card from either Visa or Mastercard. They simply ask you to put it into the machine and enter your PIN. They will then receive a message on their screen telling them that the transaction is authorised, declined or (very occasionally) being referred to the card issuer.
The card issuer's computer system may see an attempt to use the card as an 'unusual transaction' and automatically block a purchase. When this happens you've no alternative but to phone the card issuer to have the block lifted. Informing the card issuer that you'll be using the card abroad will make no difference, since it's the computer that does the automatic blocking. But if you've informed the issuer, when you phone they'll see that you've told them you'll be abroad, and that'll make it easier to have the block lifted. I go on holiday abroad to the same place at the same time every year, so spending on my card is hardly an 'unusual transaction', but it still gets blocked every time! Best to phone before you go, even if it's to check the helpline phone number is appropriate. When my bank changed to Visa, the helpline number on the new card simply put me through to a recording that told me my balance!!
I have traveled all over Europe from the USA and if I inform my card holder where I am going and what towns I will be in and the dates I will be gone, I have never had a problem using my debit or credit cards. The reason for using a debit card is that you can get cash out of a machine without being charged for a cash advance by your card holder.
hc4361, I believe Nationwide do charge now although their charges are among the lowest, according to comparison sites. We used it in Hamburg at Christmas and got an excellent rate of exchange. We always let the card companies know when we are using them abroad, we had a problem in NZ once.
If you intend to use your card at check-in to cover hotel room extras but intend to pay cash on checkout as we usually do, a credit card is best, a debit card is debitted immediately.
If you intend to use your card at check-in to cover hotel room extras but intend to pay cash on checkout as we usually do, a credit card is best, a debit card is debitted immediately.
> they don`t use the PIN system in the States.
Apologies, you're quite correct. I knew that chip and pin is in the process of being introduced in the US, but hadn't checked properly:
http://articles.busin...-cards-offering-cards
http://www.pcmag.com/...0,2817,2399772,00.asp
Anyway, I have just received a new Visa debit card today, and it mentions that it can be used anywhere displaying a Visa sign. It further mentions informing the bank of travel dates and destinations in advance to reduce the likelihood of transactions being refused, and further recommends paying for things in the local currency rather than sterling, if offered a choice, to falling foul of the store's own exchange rate, which may vary wildly from the "official" one.
Apologies, you're quite correct. I knew that chip and pin is in the process of being introduced in the US, but hadn't checked properly:
http://articles.busin...-cards-offering-cards
http://www.pcmag.com/...0,2817,2399772,00.asp
Anyway, I have just received a new Visa debit card today, and it mentions that it can be used anywhere displaying a Visa sign. It further mentions informing the bank of travel dates and destinations in advance to reduce the likelihood of transactions being refused, and further recommends paying for things in the local currency rather than sterling, if offered a choice, to falling foul of the store's own exchange rate, which may vary wildly from the "official" one.