Thought I would share a little tip I found out when using your credit card in Ireland.
You will find many places that will ask you if you want to charge the purchase in US$ or Euro's. If you instruct them to use US$ you will find in the fine print of your charge that an additional 3% fee is tagged on to the purchase.
I have a Capital One Credit card and they are one of the few that charge no fee for purchases made in Euros. If you have a card like mine you want them to charge it in Euro's, not US$.
If the credit card company you use charges a fee (which is usually 3%) then it doesn't matter.
There were several instances where they did not even ask me (even though they are required to) and put the charge in US$. One of these was Dan Dooley.
What you are referring to is a rampant --and illegal -- SCAM, called DCC (Dynamic Currency Conversion). When you are charged, there is a 'Tag Line' above the signature line that states that you REQUESTED that the charge be madein US dollars.
FYI -- For credit card issuers who DO charge a 'Foreign Transaction Fee', it makes NO difference to them, whether the charge is in Dollars, or in Euros -- the Fee remains in effect.
Visa and MasterCard (the companies that ACTUALLY perform the conversion) charge EVERYONE 1% and Amex charges 2%. The card issuer (Chase, MBNA, Citi, etc.) tack on the extra 1-3%. Capital One is also charged the 1% by MC or Visa -- they just opt to absorb it (and not charge any other), on SOME of their cards.
Ireland is INFAMOUS for DCC -- but, so is Italy and a few other countries. I have even heard of this being pulled in Canada.
Bob
-- Edited by Itallian Chauffeur at 22:51, 2007-07-18
__________________
Bob
Help Us to Help You. The more you tell us about your plans (dates, interests, budget), the better we can tailor our advice to suit!
Thanks. Unfortunately we are well aware of DCC. But there are new people that may not have yet heard of it. It was invented in Ireland by Fexco. I have info about it in my book, on my Money and Tips & Tricks pages. The more informed we can be as travelers, the better. Any time we can save money in Ireland I try to pass it along.