Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Review: Is WeSwap, the crowdfunded prepaid card, worth a look?

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

This is our review of the WeSwap Mastercard travel money card.

If you use a rewards credit card when travelling, you will incur a fee of 3% on everything you buy.  This can never be justified by the reward points earned on the transaction.  It may be justified if you need to hit a spending target to trigger a sign-up bonus or a voucher such as the British Airways American Express 2-4-1 but this is rarely relevant.

Over the next week or so we are going to look at a few no and low FX fee options.  We reviewed Tandem a few weeks ago (click here) so we not going to cover that again.  We reviewed Revolut here (and we have a special reader deal to avoid the £5 postage fee) and looked at some 0% credit cards.

All of these products have different features – there is no ‘right’ answer.  Some are more fiddly than others, some are prepaid cards and some are credit cards, some have added benefits such as 0% interest on purchases.

WeSwap card review

If you DO want to earn frequent flyer miles or reward points from your foreign spending, the best option is Curve Card. Curve is free and has a 1% foreign exchange fee (2/3rd lower than most cards).  It recharges your purchase to any other Visa or Mastercard you own in Sterling.  This means you earn miles and points on the underlying card without paying the usual 2.99% foreign transaction fee.  Curve Card will pay you £5 for trying it outread our article here.

The WeSwap Mastercard travel money card

The WeSwap Mastercard was originally very similar to Revolut, being a pre-paid travel money card which had to be loaded before you spent on it.  This product has recently changed into a hybrid credit card / prepaid travel money card.

We were also intrigued after it won “Best Travel Money Provider 2018” at the British Bank Awards.  It also raised £8m from 3,500 existing customers through a recent crowdfunding scheme.

The official WeSwap website is here.  The credit card option is explained separately here.

What is WeSwap?

Like Revolut, WeSwap is an online platform with an app (so you need a smartphone) and a linked plastic Mastercard.  It lets you exchange your money for any foreign currency, although the fees are lowest with their 18 core currencies.

The USP for WeSwap is that you are swapping your money with other travellers.  You don’t see this but, behind the scenes, WeSwap moves money onto your card when another member is looking to swap the same currency back into Sterling.

The smart thing about this is that fees are low, because WeSwap is not buying your currency in the FX markets.  The downside is that you need to give them some time – up to seven days – to get your money.  You can have it instantly but the fee is higher.

How doesWeSwap work?

You sign up on the WeSwap website here.  You will then need to download the WeSwap app and wait for a WeSwap Mastercard to appear in your letterbox.

You can load your card via a debit card or bank transfer.  Credit cards are not accepted (note that Revolut does now allow loading with a credit card, which some issuers are treating as a purchase and so earning you miles and points ….)

Every WeSwap member loads their cards with their home currency – £ for UK readers.

How do I spend money with WeSwap?

Your card will be loaded in £.  Before you travel, you need to swap your £ balance into the currency you need.  This will be processed at the Mastercard interbank rate less a fee of:

1% if you give WeSwap seven days to complete your swap

1.3% if you give WeSwap three days to complete your swap

2% if you want WeSwap to swap your money immediately

A swap may be completed faster than the time stated depending on the amount of money that WeSwap members are currently moving in each direction.  If you choose the seven or three day options, you can see via the app how much of the order has been filled at any point and, if you want, complete the swap immediately by switching to the 2% option.

If you want to swap into a currency which is not one of the core 18 currencies (GBP, USD, EUR, CAD, AUD, ZAR, CHF, NOK, SEK, DKK, HKD, PLN, NZD, SGD, HUF, JPY, ILS, TRY) then the fee is fixed at 2% and the transaction is done immediately.

When you make a purchase abroad, the transaction is debited from your balance in that currency.  There is no transaction fee as long as you have a big enough balance.

If you do not have enough money in the currency needed – but you do have enough loaded in Sterling – the transaction is still authorised but you are charged a 2% fee for converting the amount into £.

Can I make ATM withdrawals abroad with WeSwap?

Yes.  You can make two withdrawals per 24 hour period for a total of no more than £500.

Withdrawals in any currency except the 18 listed above are capped at £200 per week.

ATM withdrawals are free above the equivalent of £200.  There is charge of around £1.50 for small withdrawals.

What limits does WeSwap have?

It has limits and some of them don’t appear too generous.

You are limited to 10 transactions per day.  This could be difficult in countries such as Sweden where a large number of shops no longer accept cash.

There is an annual spending limit of £12,000.

WeSwap can also now be a credit card, if you want it

WeSwap recently added a credit option.   Here are the details.

Depending on your status, you will be allowed to borrow between £250 and £2000.  Unlike a traditional credit card, you need to request a lump sum which is loaded in £ to your card.  You can then convert this sum into other currencies just like you had loaded the card from your bank account.

There is no interest to pay if you settle the balance via a transfer from your bank account or with a debit card within 30 days.  If you do not settle the balance in 30 days you will pay 19.9% interest.

Is a WeSwap card worth getting?

Here at Head for Points we are generally not keen on prepaid foreign currency cards such as Revolut and WeSwap.  If you have a good income then you will get the best deal by getting a standard credit card with 0% foreign exchange fees and using that abroad.  We will be looking at a few of those products, such as the Virgin Money Travel credit card and – under reader pressure! – Aqua, in this series.

WeSwap, Revolut and the like are better suited to people who are less likely to qualify for credit cards, are concerned about losing their credit card abroad or for parents to give to their children when travelling.  There may be other members of your family who will find it more useful than you.  The card is fiddly and, unless you turn on the credit card option, there is a risk that you won’t have enough money to make a purchase.

It is possible that you are happier paying a small fee to WeSwap by using the pre-paid card rather than potentially restricting your ability to get credit elsewhere by adding a 0% FX credit card to your credit report.

WeSwap is FREE, of course, so signing up and giving it a try does not cost you anything.  You may find it works for you.

You can find out more about WeSwap on their website here.  The credit card option is explained separately here.


Want to earn more points from credit cards? – April 2024 update

If you are looking to apply for a new credit card, here are our top recommendations based on the current sign-up bonuses.

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

You can see our full directory of all UK cards which earn airline or hotel points here. Here are the best of the other deals currently available.

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

18,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Earning miles and points from small business cards

If you are a sole trader or run a small company, you may also want to check out these offers:

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year Read our full review

Capital on Tap Business Rewards Visa

Huge 30,000 points bonus until 12th May 2024 Read our full review

For a non-American Express option, we also recommend the Barclaycard Select Cashback card for sole traders and small businesses. It is FREE and you receive 1% cashback on your spending.

Barclaycard Select Cashback Business Credit Card

1% cashback uncapped* on all your business spending (T&C apply) Read our full review

Comments (115)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • guesswho2000 says:

    O/T but related, having clicked on the link, seems Revolut is coming to Australia (I’m assuming it’s thrown me that welcome message based on my IP address). I seem to remember it being available ex-EU previously, so they’re obviously fixing whatever issue stopped that.

    Anyone have any idea whether it’ll be straightforward enough to just swap my UK-based Revolut over? Or how you change your country at all, as I don’t have the option to select anything other than UK? Works fine with my Australian phone number though.

    I still use my old UK one now and again, I just can’t change my address on it, and assume the card will disappear into the ether once it expires, unless I can update it.

    • John says:

      Why can’t you change your address? Do you mean you no longer have a UK address?

      You can always get a new account in Australia

      • Guesswho2000 says:

        I have a UK address, and it’s linked to it. I can change the address, but only to a UK one – it won’t let me change the selected country. Not a massive issue, just wonder why, since there’s other countries I can officially have it in too!

    • Bagoly says:

      I managed to get a card sent to an address different from the one I used to set up the account (in a different country)
      But that was three months ago, and Revolut changes their code continually, so it might not work now.

      What surprises me is that it is linked to your Australian number – I thought address and ‘phone number had to be from same country.

      • Guesswho2000 says:

        Yeah, what’s more surprising is that it’s not even a case of entering the number and jamming the country code on at the beginning (which I did with MBNA, and worked), I was actually able to select ‘+61’ from the list.

    • Peter K says:

      From what I have read on the Revolut message boards they have been “coming to Australia” for some months now (5?) but still not made it yet.

  • dan says:

    I assume you can only load from debit cards? Curve Debit an option here too I guess?

  • Richard says:

    I don’t think it is for me but an interesting read, thanks for the review

  • Sandgrounder says:

    WeSwap is a good option if you want to hold a balance in another currency that you will need to withdraw in cash. Otherwise, it just isn’t as good as Revolut, which has now become much more than a prepaid card. I look forward to this review. And don’t forget to cover the Barclaycard Platinum Travel CC!

    • Trev says:

      “WeSwap is a good option if you want to hold a balance in another currency that you will need to withdraw in cash.”

      Revolut allows that too, at swap rates with an instant conversion so whilst the WeSwap approach is a differentiator I personally don’t see it as a benefit over the competition…

      • Sandgrounder says:

        Fee free withdrawals, Revolut charges for everything over 200 £/€/$ per month. At 2%. So, 1% conversion fee is better than 2% ATM charge. Maybe I should have qualified my comment. Overall I would agree Revolut is a better product. But for those who prefer to spend cash while travelling, and get through more than £/€/$400 a month, WeSwap would be cheaper. You could, of course, get both.

        • Sandgrounder says:

          It didn’t occur to dozy me to link my Curve to Revolut! Presumably now if I set the card currency in the Curve app to match the country I am in I will now have unlimited free withdrawals?

        • Memesweeper says:

          Not unlimited— Revolut has limits too — I use both to double the effective foreign cash available.

        • Sandgrounder says:

          Does Curve treat Revolut as a credit card (£200 a month free) or as a debit card (10 free w/d then 50p each) ? I think I will find out today. I am guessing CC though

  • Trev says:

    Whilst I agree that Revolut is slightly more fiddly than a straight up 0% FX card such as Halifax Clarity, the main upside I find is that you can do an instant transfer and “lock in” a rate. For example if I were to be in the states this week I could have converted £->$ at 1.43 in the middle of April (admittedly this can also work against you)..

    • callum says:

      If you’re able to “keep an eye on the market” you should quit your job and become a full-time FX-broker….

      • JPV says:

        You’re completely right, and the attitude that regular people are canny enough to choose a point in time as having a “good” exchange rate is always a bit irritating to me as well.

        As you point out, if someone had even a *slight* ability to predict what a certain exchange rate was going to do in the future, that person could generate essentially unlimited amounts of money on the fx market.

        The ability to “lock in” a current rate might be good for some people as a tool to reduce volatility – but reducing volatility also means you miss out on fx movements that would have benefited you as well as movements which would have caused you to pay more. It can still be useful, but it doesn’t mean you’re beating the market.

      • Jon says:

        JPV I’m so glad I’m not the only one who internally laughs/cringes in equal measure when people whose experience of currency trading starts and ends with their annual holiday start explaining how to get a “good” exchange rate!! [and that pretty much includes me – but at least I know a random walk when I see one]

  • Tony says:

    Always worth bearing in mind that pre-paid cards fall outside FSCS protection.

  • Marcelo C says:

    Finally an Aqua review! That’s great! 🙂

    • Matt says:

      Why are people so keen on an Aqua card review? Isn’t it for people with lots of plastic debt and poor credit rating, which surely isn’t the demographic of the HfP readership?

      • John says:

        No, it’s for anyone who thinks the benefits offered are useful.

      • Rob says:

        Yes 🙂

        But people keep saying we should cover it …..

      • callum says:

        Because this site has a wide readership and is no longer the sole domain for financial snobs…

        I still can’t believe this rubbish looking card gets a proper review while Aqua still gets the snobby and snarky comments though. It’s completely classless in my eyes (somewhat ironically!).

        • Rob says:

          Do you know what website has the highest crossover with HFP readers? City AM.

        • callum says:

          It’s pretty obvious from the comments section that there are a significant number of people who aren’t city executives. The reason you’re begrudgingly mentioning Aqua!

          Are all/most of them really that snobby though? I know it’s the stereotype for them, but the (very) small handful I know don’t act like this.

          • Rob says:

            I’m saying that the sub-four figure credit limit they are likely to get with Aqua won’t go far.

        • Lumma says:

          To be fair, I have seen comments on here along the lines of “I don’t want a credit card with strawberries on”, so I think there is a bit of natural snobbishness in everyone at times.

          The biggest issue with using aqua as my non-amex/overseas card is that it doesn’t have contactless and the website/app are a bit rubbish. The card does look a bit naff if that matters to someone though

        • callum says:

          Lumma – Not wanting a card with strawberries on it isn’t “snobbish” though, it’s just picky.

          Rob – Oh right, though it will go pretty far if they make payments to it, which is no more onerous than the weird set up with a Weswap card!

  • Marcelo C says:

    Btw, if you have a 0% foreign exchange fee card link to curve, just select the local currency on that card settings and curve won’t charge you the 1% exchange fee.

    • Alan says:

      Indeed, works for ATM withdrawals too (I linked it to my Lloyds MC for Avios abroad, albeit not a great rate).

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.