Cards
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/07/2006 - 16:51In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
There are plenty of ATM machines, and if you do open an Italian bank account withdrawals at branches of your own bank (or those on the same circuit as your bank) are free. Banks will give you a debit card for use in ATMs, paying for petrol, supermarket use, motorway tolls etc., within days of opening an account (no residency requirement). 250 Euro max cash withdrawal unless at your own branch, where it is higher.
Credit cards are widely accepted (sometimes Amex is not liked, though), but watch the exchange rate your card issuer gives you when paying in Euros, and if they make a charge - these can be high. Generally difficult to get an Italian credit card without residency.
It probably depends where in Italy you are going to be based, but in my area one of the banks which has "Cooperativa" in its name is generally the cheapest and has the biggest spread of free ATMs.
To run an account with a "high street bank" here, ballpark is 80Euros a year to have the account, between 1 and 4 Euros for each direct debit, around 1.5 Euros per counter cash withdrawal. No charge to open the account, but a charge to close it!! One euro a month for online access.
They are generally not too expensive in commissions putting wired money into a current account, and give a reasonable rate of exchange (compared with the UK, at least). Generally have a min charge, so worth moving loads of money at a time! Bank drafts have to be paid into an account - cannot be cashed - (money laundering controls).
Western Union seem to have quite a lot of franchised outlets - you may find this a good way to move money across - I have no idea of their rates.
That about drains me of knowledge on banks!!
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Thanks a bunch! That is some very helpful information! It sounds like the fees are much worse than the US, but not as bad as I was afraid of...seems like if I make sure to take out the max every time I use an ATM, and pay cash for things until I'm out, I shouldn't be facing too many extra fees.
one card i use is the american express travellers cheque card. I find i can buy euros when i want meaning i get a better rate. if you charge the card, you can use it as a normal credit card or withdraw cash. There is a charge for cash withdrawals though. You also get all the protection of travellers cheques ie: passport replacement etc.
Andy