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Ok you Vagabonders, I have a money question

PostPosted: May 4th, 2005
by Prisa
So here's something that I hadn't really thought of until now.
Let's say you have about 12,000 dollars for you RTW trip. What amount do you keep in plastic, cash, or traveller's check? And do you tend to spread your money out or keep it in your wallet/moneybelt?
I've travelled for 2 months in SE Asia but I kept it in travellers checks, a bit on my visa debt card and carried about 30 dollars cash and I kept it all in my moneybelt.
But with much larger amounts (12,000 dollars) where do you store most of it?

PostPosted: May 4th, 2005
by Rocknrod
Not sure how I'd set it up... for sure enough to get home from anywhere would be set aside. Cream off the top!

PostPosted: May 4th, 2005
by atlas
I am not a very seasoned traveler but I think that I would keep the larger portion in an account that can only be accessed by a pin #. Like a debit card. I would get a joint account with someone I trusted back home so if need be they can transfer funds for me. That way I would only have to have a Credit card worth about 1000 and maybe 500 or 1000? In traveler’s checks. This way if some one steels every thing you have the only thing you have to worry about is canceling your credit card right away. I do not think they could use your traveler’s checks. And in any case you could always have your special someone from home wire you money from your debit account to a Thomas cook or something like that until you get back on your feet. Smile just a thought I have never really done a round the world trip but I had my money belt stolen in Europe and was left with out a penny to my name in Venice. I cannot stress enough the importance of having some other persons name on your accounts from home that you trust so they can make transfers cancellations ect . When you are flat broke it is hard to stay on the phone for three hours trying to get a hold of some one from the credit card company to cancel your cardsI am not a very seasoned traveler but I think that I would keep the larger portion in an account that can only be accessed by a pin #. Like a debit card. I would get a joint account with someone I trusted back home so if need be they can transfer funds for me. That way I would only have to have a Credit card worth about 1000 and maybe 500 or 1000? In traveler’s checks. This way if some one steels every thing you have the only thing you have to worry about is canceling your credit card right away. I do not think they could use your traveler’s checks. And in any case you could always have your special someone from home wire you money from your debit account to a Thomas cook or something like that until you get back on your feet. Smile just a thought I have never really done a round the world trip but I had my money belt stolen in Europe and was left with out a penny to my name in Venice. I cannot stress enough the importance of having some other persons name on your accounts from home that you trust so they can make transfers cancellations ect . When you are flat broke it is hard to stay on the phone for three hours trying to get a hold of some one from the credit card company to cancel your cards

PostPosted: May 4th, 2005
by atlas
That’s strange my post doubled up Confused

That’s strange my post doubled up Confused

PostPosted: May 4th, 2005
by bparks
i haven't used this but it looks interesting

http://www.ekit.com/ekit/home/amex_travelfunds

-Brandon

PostPosted: May 5th, 2005
by SurfingDan
I have a large amount into a fairly high interest rate savings account (2.5%) and keep about 2000 in my checking account, 300 in Travelers checks hidden on me, and another 200 USD in my money belt.

I use ATMs everywhere and when my checking gets below 1000, I just do an online transfer between the savings and checking.

Works great so far. Good luck.

PostPosted: May 5th, 2005
by Hillbilly
The thing is though with a debit card ( I never take a credit card on my travels) if its lost or stolen, its very hard to replace while on your travels, because most banks will only send a new card to your home address. So basically you'd have no direct access to your account I myself at least from now on go with mostly traveler's checks and three diffrent stashes of american cash mostly in crisp twenty dollar bills.

The traveler's checks are easy enough to replace or at the very least recieve a cash refund for.

PostPosted: May 5th, 2005
by ChrisH
Good point Hillbilly - I took cards from two accounts, plus a Visa card, so when I lost one of the cashcards it was no biggie (apart from paying more for withdrawals!). ATMs really are your best friend - I can't think of many places travellers' cheques would be accepted where there wouldn't be a cash machine outside!

Obviously a stash of US$ for emergencies is pretty much a given, but there's no need to dig into that unless you get a serious tits-up situation!

PostPosted: May 5th, 2005
by Dan W
I found:

1) Travellers Cheques are too easy to spend. WAY too easy to spend.
2) DONT bring a pin number with your credit card
3) DO pay for an account with reduced rate on international exchange. I paid £16 per quarter for a "zero" commission charge on all foreign ATM transactions. Saved me a bucketload. Of course, I think some banks offer this as standard but I was with Natwest.
4) Debit Card is the only way to go - even better if its a VISA debit. Very handy for those motel/carhire/boathire/canoehire downpayments.
5) No matter what you think, you never have "just enough" money.
6) Spending it all on beer seems like a better idea at the time Big Grin

Dan

PostPosted: May 5th, 2005
by Hillbilly
to me its a lot easier to just put the card in the atm and get cash out, then it is to cash a travelers check. It helps me stay on budget better. But of coarse the more diffrent options you have, the less likely you'll run into trouble. But the number one rule is DON"T TOUCH THE EMERGENCY CASH!!!! UNLESS YOU HAVE NO OTHER OPTIONS (IE AN EMERGENCY)

PostPosted: May 5th, 2005
by Prisa
what I've found is that I'm not fantastic at budgeting. I'm just not. But I (will) have 12,000 dollars put away for an extended trip by the end of June next year.
What concerns me is this:
I have a Visa Debt card which has proved very handy for hotel payments and airfare...however when I tried to use it in the bank atms in Vancouver (I'm from Seattle) I don't think it recognized the bank (the card is from a credit union) so it didn't go through. Is there a bank that is almost worldwide recognized so that I don't have to worry about getting money out of atms in say...Lebanon or Morocco?

Also is it worth it to take a credit card? I've heard the exchange rates on credit cards are better, and while I'd have a 'bit' of debt when comming back to the states it's nothing I couldn't pay off. I wouldn't spend a lot, mostly just emergency stuff. And with a credit card if I HAD to get home right away I could book a ticket regardless of how much liquid money I had on me.

Anyway, thanks for all the helpfull responses. Smile

PostPosted: May 5th, 2005
by Not the first Travis
quote:
I have a Visa Debt card which has proved very handy for hotel payments and airfare...however when I tried to use it in the bank atms in Vancouver (I'm from Seattle) I don't think it recognized the bank (the card is from a credit union) so it didn't go through.


That sounds really unusual. I'm not suggesting it didn't happen, just maybe why it happened. Any atm/debit card, even from a credit union, should be on one (or many) of the big systems (Plus, Cirrus, yadda-yadda) that would allow you to use it in a foreign atm. At any rate, if for some reason the debit card you have with the credit union is less accepted, you could just open an account at a bank, dump your cash into it pre-trip, and use that debit card.

PostPosted: May 6th, 2005
by Alex Conway
I would carry $6000 in Golden Sacagawea Dollar Coins in a bag with a dollar sign ($) on it. And the other half I would carry in Silver Dollar Coins...also in a dollar sign bag.

PostPosted: May 7th, 2005
by goodlookinrebel
"I would carry $6000 in Golden Sacagawea Dollar Coins in a bag with a dollar sign ($) on it. And the other half I would carry in Silver Dollar Coins...also in a dollar sign bag."

Now thats the first logical idea anyone has posted so far.

PostPosted: May 7th, 2005
by Miss Nic
quote:
Originally posted by Alex Conway:
I would carry $6000 in Golden Sacagawea Dollar Coins in a bag with a dollar sign ($) on it. And the other half I would carry in Silver Dollar Coins...also in a dollar sign bag.


This is also a great way to make a lot of travel buddies really quickly. Particularly if your the kind of person thats inclined to leave your bags with your friends when you go to the bathroom.