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Review: the Currensea travel money card – a low-fee way to spend abroad

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This is our review of the Currensea travel money card. Is it worth getting one? It is free, after all!

Currensea is an interesting new fintech company which I was introduced to by a reader a couple of years ago.

I wrote about it around 18 months ago. My thesis was that Currensea is as simple as hell – bordering on boring – and that this is a good thing.

Some readers disagreed. They felt that it was better to clog up your credit report with a separate 0% FX credit card for overseas use, or open a current account with a fintech to get a debit card with 0% FX.

Review: the Currensea travel money card

Perhaps I’m just getting lazy in my old age, but I can’t be bothered with all that. I have found myself using it on most of my overseas trips this year so I do personally see value in it.

What is Currensea?

Currensea is simple enough that it passes my ‘Can you explain it to your mate in the pub in 30 seconds?’ test:

It is a free direct debit card to use abroad and which automatically recharges all purchases to your existing current account in Sterling, less a small 0.5% fee.

That’s it.

You don’t earn any airline miles or points for using it.

There is nothing to top-up or prepay. You simply spend as you would on a normal debit card and the money is taken from your current account – just without the usual 3% fee.

Oh, and Currensea is free to apply for, which also helps.

In fact, it is better than free. Using our semi-exclusive link here gets you a £10 credit when you spend £150 on the card.

There are also some interesting travel benefits if you choose a paid plan, but the free plan works fine for me.

Why would I want to get a Currensea card?

If you have a credit card offering 0% foreign exchange fees, then you don’t need a Currensea card, unless you want free ATM withdrawals. You can stop reading now.

However, credit cards which offer rewards and charge 0% FX fees are few and far between. The only ‘miles and points’ options which offer a partial solution are the Virgin Atlantic credit cards which have 0% FX fees in the Euro zone.

Currensea IS possibly for you if:

  • you don’t have a credit card offering 0% FX fees and do not want to impact your credit report by getting another credit card specifically to use abroad
  • you want a product which allows you to make £500 of foreign currency ATM withdrawals per month with no fees and only a minimal FX mark-up (there is a small fee beyond £500)
  • you want a product for you, your adult children, parents, partner or anyone else in your life who needs a simple, easy to understand payment card that will save them money when travelling
Review: the Currensea travel money card

How does Currensea work in practice?

It is, as I said earlier, a very simple process. You use your Currensea card in the same way as your existing debit card.

  • You make your purchase or cash withdrawal in local currency (any currency, globally)
  • Your current account bank automatically confirms that you have enough money in your account and authorises the transaction
  • The transaction goes through at either the interbank rate or the Mastercard rate, depending on the currency. Currensea adds a 0.5% fee if you have the free card. There are no fees if you have one of their paid cards.
  • You get an automatic spend notification via the Currensea app, if you choose to install it
  • The money is taken from your current account a few days later

Here is an example. When I was in Prague last week I withdrew some cash from an ATM.

This is what you see in the Currensea app, which shows £345.95 scheduled to leave my HSBC account a few days later:

Currensea review

The exchange rate differential for the Czech Republic is actually higher than 0.5% because it isn’t one of the 16 core Currensea currencies, which I list below. In this case it uses the Mastercard rate + 0.5% instead of the interbank rate + 0.5%.

A few days later, on the day specified in the original transaction confirmation, the charge hit my HSBC account like this:

What exchange rate does Currensea use?

Currensea offers 16 major currencies at the real (interbank) rate (EUR, USD, AUD, CAD, CHF, DKK, HKD, HUF, JPY, NOK, NZD, PLN, SEK, SGD, THB and ZAR) and an additional 164 currencies at the Mastercard rate, which is marginally away from interbank. On the free Currensea plan, you pay this rate plus 0.5%.

Note that, for the 16 currencies where Currensea uses the interbank rate, I am told that you will get a similar deal – even with Currensea’s 0.5% fee – to using a 0% FX credit card which uses the Mastercard or Visa rate.

You can see Currensea’s live exchange rate here if you want to compare.

Note that, unlike Curve, Revolut etc, there are NO ‘weekend surcharges’, ‘top-up fees’, ‘fair use fees’ etc etc.  As I said at the start, this is a very simple and idiot-proof product with no hidden charges.

There are three versions of the Currensea card

The Currensea website is here. Whilst you apply online, it has an app which lets you monitor transactions on the go.

There are three products to choose from:

  • a free card (totally free, there isn’t even a delivery fee) called ‘Essential’ which charges a 0.5% FX fee on purchases and ATM withdrawals
  • a £25 ‘Premium’ version which has no FX fees, Hertz and Avis car rental benefits and a Preferred Hotels ‘5-for-4’ deal
  • a £120 ‘Elite’ version which has no FX fees, Avis ‘President’s Club’ status, use of the ‘Ten’ concierge service, access to Mastercard’s luxury hotel booking service (stays come with extra benefits) and LoungeKey airport lounge access (£20 fee per visit payable)

The £25 version is better value if you would spend over £5,000 per year on the card, but frankly I’d suggest getting the free card to see if you like it and then upgrading later.

Can you use Currensea at cash machines abroad?

Yes. You can withdraw up to £1,000 per month from ATMs outside the UK.

The standard 0.5% fee applies to the first £500 per month but there is an additional 1.5% fee above this. You can avoid this fee by making payments directly with the card rather than paying with cash, although obviously this isn’t always possible.

The fees are lower if you have the Premium (extra 0.5% above £500 per month) or Elite (extra 0.5% above £750 per month) versions of the card.

Can you use Currensea in the UK?

The card is not designed to be used in the UK – and there is no logical reason to do so, given that you can use your exising bank debit card for free – but you can do so if you wish. There is a daily limit of £250, however. You cannot use it for ATM withdrawals in the UK.

Do I have protection for my purchases?

Currensea is a debit card, not a credit card, so you don’t have the legal protection offered by Section 75. This is the same position you are in if you use Curve, Revolut or any other debit card, or indeed an American Express charge card.

You DO have Mastercard chargeback protection, which allows you to file a claim directly with Currensea. They will liaise with Mastercard for any disputed transactions and in most cases the coverage is very similar to section 75.

How to apply for a Currensea card

To apply for a Currensea card, you must have a current account with one of the following banks:

Barclays, Bank of Scotland, Coutts, First Direct, Halifax, HSBC, Lloyds, Nationwide, NatWest, RBS, Santander, TSB, Ulster Bank, Virgin Money

It doesn’t work with any of the ‘challenger’ banks.

You apply here and it is a very simple process. You will need the sort code and account number for your current account to set up the direct debit.

When I applied, I had the card within three days. It is, as the images above show, a funky vertical shape. Activate it via the Currensea website or app and you’re away.

Is Currensea worth getting? It might be

This is a fairly short article (by HfP review standards) because Currensea is a very simple product. The bottom line is that:

  • Currensea is free, if you choose the free ‘Essential’ plan – you don’t even pay for postage
  • You can use it wherever Mastercard is accepted
  • On the free plan, you pay a fixed 0.5% FX fee on non-Sterling spend, seven days per week
  • The money is taken from your linked current account a few days later

Simple. If you, or someone you know, needs ‘simple’ then Currensea is worth a look.

There are, of course, 0% FX credit cards and current accounts with 0% FX debit cards which will save you a little bit more, but I personally find that it isn’t worth the trouble. If you spend – say – £5,000 outside the UK each year then a standard credit card will charge you £150 in fees. Currensea will charge you £25. Is it worth getting a standalone credit card or another current account to save £25? Up to you.

You can find out more, and apply, on the Currensea website here. This link gets you £10 cashback after spending £150.

PS. Whilst I said that the card does not earn airline miles, this is not strictly true. There is a partnership with Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer which lets you earn 2 miles per £1 spent but pay the standard 3% FX fee when you spend. I would personally prefer to pay 0.5% and earn no KrisFlyer miles, but if you can reclaim all of your overseas spending then this would be interesting.

Comments (126)

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

  • Derek Scott says:

    I personally find the easiest to be Monzo.. they give you the MasterCard near-wholesale rate and zero charges/fees. You get instant Sterling conversion in the app, albeit its guide only til it settles 2-3 days later, and you can check the conversion rate you’re getting in the MasterCard site: https://www.mastercard.co.uk/en-gb/personal/get-support/convert-currency.html (which Monzo give you to use)

    • Erico1875 says:

      And you can wash £1000 of Amex through Paypoint /co op every 6 months

    • david says:

      With Monzo, you can take out £200 for free every 30 days, and we’ll charge 3% after that. No bueno.

      • Save East Coast Rewards says:

        I’ve probably withdrawn less than £200 in cash for the whole year and that’s despite spending most of the year in Italy (where card acceptance is lower than the UK, although did improve during covid) plus trips to US, Mexico, Egypt and various EU countries.

        To be fair for the US one of the reasons I didn’t withdraw cash there was I still had a pile of dollars from a previous trip.

      • Alex G says:

        That only applies to cash though. Monzo is a current account. Simple and free to move money out electronically.

  • Chrisdf says:

    I’ve been using the HSBC Global Money Account recently. Obviously only for those with HSBC but it’s pretty straightforward to use with the app and rates are good too (uses visa rate for currencies if you’ve not pre loaded or using a none loadable rate

  • Bhav says:

    Baffles me how the author thinks this convoluted marketing gimmick can be explained in 30 seconds or less but a 0% credit card can’t? Perhaps neither can. Also ignores entirely things like greater credit card protection 🙄

    • Rob says:

      If you’re willing to faff around with another credit card to save £2 per month, feel free. I’ve decided I’m not bothered.

      • Quark999 says:

        How is that different than faffing around with another weird “currency conversion card” – and paying 0.5% on top for the privilege?!

        • Rob says:

          Doesn’t use up available credit so no impact on future applications. Money goes straight out of account – no statements to pay / file.

          I accept this is not normal but, because my card bills are often in five figures due to HfP expenditure (£22k for the Summer party went on a credit card), I can’t direct debit any of them because I can’t be certain that the cash is in the right place. All my card bills are paid manually.

          • Save East Coast Rewards says:

            Although I see for many it is convenient, to me a direct link to my bank account is a bad thing. If someone gets your card details (or the card itself) they have a direct link to your bank account and it may take a while to get that money back even if fraud/theft is proven.

      • The Original David says:

        I feel any HfP readers who aren’t willing to “faff around with credit cards” have somewhat missed the point of this game…

  • Bhav says:

    ^ whoops, realised I missed the section which does refer to section 75. I think it’s misleading to suggest chargeback is anything like section 75 though 🤷‍♂️

  • BuildBackBetter says:

    Curve for everything except hotels and flights.

  • yonasl says:

    I get @Rob is going for simplicity here but a Starling account will allow you to spend and take out money at ATMs for free with their Debit MasterCard. (The other challenger banks like Monzo or Revolut work well for purchases but have low limits for free cash withdrawals). You have to transfer money into the Starling account which I get is what makes OpenSea simpler.

    As for a credit card, we all know the mighty Halifax clarity with 0% fees. If you take out money, simply transfer back the amount to the card account and you won’t be charged any fees. I understand the issue with this card is it is fairly hard to get for most people as they do struck credit checks.

    Finally, I have started using Tymit now for purchases not in GBP. Very cool credit card allowing you (for free) to pay any transaction in 3 equal instalments.

  • DaveJ says:

    They don’t do a full credit check either.

    There’s zero reason to pay 0.5% when you can pay 0% with Chase

  • Alex G says:

    “Perhaps I’m just getting lazy in my old age, but I can’t be bothered with all that.”

    Time to look for a new career then.

    I’m looking for advice from someone who is prepared to jump through a few hoops to get the best deals.

    • yonasl says:

      Rob is right that all other options are:
      – get a credit card: maybe you cannot or do not want to
      – open a new bank account: you then have to fund it and make sure it has money as you travel

      You understand why the likes of Barclays, Lloyds, etc. continue to prefer to charge 3-4% on forex transaction. Many customers are just too lazy/stupid to do anything about it.

      So I get Rob’s choice of language.

    • Harrier25 says:

      Lazy people are far too lazy to read this website!

    • Rob says:

      If you’re going through so much trouble to save £25 on your annual FX fees then HotUKDeals is the place for you. We put our energy into free / cheap business class flights and luxury hotels.

      I am currently in Nero, which I go three times per week, but I don’t have a stamp card. I can’t be done with the faff to get £2 of free coffee per month. I have bigger fish to fry.

      • Save East Coast Rewards says:

        But you did a whole article on getting a free sausage roll in Greggs! 😁

        • Rob says:

          That was in the name of entertainment 🙂

          • Harrier25 says:

            Sorry but what’s entertaining about reading an article on purchasing a sausage roll with points?

          • Rob says:

            We hit 25 million annual page views last Sunday, up 25% on the year and up 40% on 2019. We know what we’re doing 🙂

          • Save East Coast Rewards says:

            Thinking about sausage rolls and entertainment, I just heard the new Ladbaby song which is going for Christmas No1 and it’s so depressing. I know many people are struggling this year but to compare with the famine in parts of Africa in the 80s is a bit much.

            Ladbaby are massive grifters and despite supposedly all profits from their songs going to Trussel Trust they’ve somehow become millionaires over the last few years off the back of it (things like the merchandise they sell does’t go to charity despite many thinking it does).

            It almost makes you wat to go back to the time when Mr Blobby was Christmas number 1 😬

      • Harrier25 says:

        Why not fry the bigger fish while enjoying a free £2 coffee. Seems like a missed opportunity to me!

        • JDB says:

          @Harrier25 based on the ratio of comments, I get the impression that many people here are so busy and focussed on saving 2p/20p/£2 that they can’t actually see the bigger fish.

          • Rob says:

            There is a guy I know who is probably the best in the country at this sort of thing. He will book an all inclusive hotel for one night to get the wristband and then book 10 nights on room only afterwards. He would have been ludicrously successful if he’d channelled these skills into a business but he hasn’t, so he carries on getting the odd few thousand per year of freebies instead of hundreds of thousands from the company he could easily have built.

          • Save East Coast Rewards says:

            (This is a reply to Rob and the all inclusive hotel comment)

            I’ve thought about doing the same but I always suspected this would never work. When I checked out of an all inclusive in Mexico they asked me to remove my wristband when checking out. I would have thought that the hotel would have noted that they were staying multiple nights and would have asked them to remove the band the next day and if they refused would have informed the bars/restaurants in the hotel to charge for service.

          • Steve says:

            This is very important to bear in mind. I have a friend who is fixated on doing multiple current account switches all for a few extra quid a year. The amount of faff means the effective hourly rate is very low.

        • Harrier25 says:

          Rob, I’ve never doubted that you don’t know what you’re doing and I for one am very grateful for what you do.

      • Cwyfan says:

        Take care of the pennies and the pounds will take care of themselves.

        At Nero, I use their app, my meerkats 25% discount, and my own cup. So every 4th cup is essentially free.

        I also fry the bigger fish, but fry the smaller ones too, as I do not receive any affiliated commission to subsidise my lifestyle.

        • Save East Coast Rewards says:

          “fry the smaller ones too”

          I quite like whitebait, I’ve not seen it for a while 🐟

          • His Holyness says:

            Marco Pierre White has loads in his Groupon restaurants

          • Save East Coast Rewards says:

            Hmm, a Marco Pierre White attached to a hotel I was staying in was probably the last time I had whitebait. So that narrows it down to the DoubleTree Milton Keynes in 2021 (there for the Grand Prix).

      • David says:

        Very rude to poop on HotUKdeals Rob. Felt like a school playground dig. I use that site, does that mean I am not invited to this one?!

        • Rob says:

          It’s a good site, we use the occasional thing from there.

          My point is that people come here for big ticket savings, not a couple of quid here and there.

      • s says:

        You mean the coffee that you paid for using nectar points, and therefore not eligible to participate in the stamp card?

        • Save East Coast Rewards says:

          Is it an actual stamp card or something integrated into an app? If it’s the former I’d not bother either (as I usually forget to carry those things) but if it just requires a scan of a code in the app then I’d do it (well I would if I drank coffee)

      • Nick Burch says:

        If you install the Nero app, you can collect stamps in the app and pay with a card. Or do both in one go if you’d rather!

        Using the app ought to be roughly faff-neutral 🙂

      • rob keane says:

        I think most regulars here know that Hfp puts most energy into the articles that can return revenue to it, which often translates ito promoting cards that give them a kickback compared to other potentially better cards that do not. I note that currensea is listed as an “active affiliate partner”, whereas many of the cards mentioned in the this comments thread (monzo, chase, HSBC) are not listed as affiliates

        • Rob says:

          You are failing to understand simple business. Unsurprisingly, if you write about rubbish products then no-one gets them (this is not exactly an audience of thickos) and so no money is generated and we’d just look silly filling space with nonsense.

          We probably turn down £20k of requests for sponsored articles each year for stuff we don’t like and that’s flat fee work. (Take a look at Business Traveller’s current article on small towns on Georgia as an example.) We certainly won’t waste space on commission-only deals for stuff no-one will get.

          • joe Jordan says:

            I understand that many business spend inordinately large sums of money on advertising one way or another on the mistaken belief that their product is compelling when it is not. And I understand that people that have advertising space will take that money.
            That’s simple business.

          • Rob says:

            Except we don’t take the money. We turned down two more Yonder articles (decent four figure sum) the other week because we thought one was enough.

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