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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.

  • Tom says:

    When I’ve used mine abroad this year it has given better rates than my Curve metal. I even split one large bill and paid half with each card and the Currensea one was notably less.

    • NFH says:

      Was this at the weekend when Curve adds a surcharge? Weekends are the most common time to settle hotel bills. For a longer stay, a workaround is to settle most or all of the bill using Curve (or Revolut) on the preceding Friday.

      • Harrier25 says:

        If you convert sterling to the required currency on a weekday within the Revolut app, this is another way to avoid their 0.5% uplift weekend charge.

        • NFH says:

          Very true. With Revolut, one should always buy the expenditure currency in advance instead of spending directly from a GBP balance, because the time of expenditure will rarely be the optimal time to carry out the FX. But Revolut can’t support holding balances in restricted currencies, particularly in Latin America and South East Asia. So the preceding Friday solution must be used instead.

  • Rob says:

    The reason we never recommended the Barclays card is that it would, still does, block you from a huge Avios bonus via Barclaycard. We knew the Avios cards were coming for a year before launch. Holding that card cost you 50,000 Avios!

    I’m sure there is some value in recommending the MBNA card which is no longer available but I am struggling to see it 🙂

  • Save East Coast Rewards says:

    I wonder why you can’t use Monzo with this? Monzo supports the open banking linkage (you can link it to Nectar connect among other things).

    I agree with those who say it’s not really a product for the typical HfP reader, I can imagine most who sign up for it are just doing it for the free £10 rather than to use it regularly. However, when this article was run last year it did change my views on the product. Before then I used to think it served absolutely no purpose but now I think there is probably a space for it among those who really find changing things a hassle (they don’t want to maintain a balance in another account just to save on FX fees). So it might be something you can recommend to certain family and friends but unlikely to use yourself.

  • Ian says:

    Much better options.

    Curve is still the best and you earn points on your spend. Or Momzo or Chase – much better options IMHO

    Disagree with the clogging up of the credit report.

    Having credit cards can increase your ability to borrow. Credit is good if you ever want to borrow.

    It will also mean that any borrowing is at a lower percentage. Currently if you buy airline tickets for a few grand on a card your utilisation will go through the roof. Having extra borrowing decreases that amount.

  • Peter W-G says:

    “Is it worth getting a standalone credit card or another current account to save £25?” Isn’t it saving £125 or are my maths wrong?

    • Rob says:

      Currensea saves you £125, on my example, so you only save an extra £25 by getting a 0% credit card with the faff that running another credit card entails.

      • DaveJ says:

        Theres close to zero faff associated with having another credit card.

        • Rob says:

          *You have extra unused credit, which will reduce your ability to get other credit cards (since your cap is basically ‘total credit across all cards as % of your salary’ against the lenders internal target)
          *More paperwork to file
          *More payments to make (assuming you manually pay, as I do for reasons I explained earlier)

          If you use direct debit and use online statements then 2 and 3 don’t apply of course.

  • soloflyer1977 says:

    For occasional overseas spend (and being able to use Barclays avios card on google play), curve blue is the way to go. And you get your avios with it as well, which negates the 0.5% weekend fee/go above £1k overseas spend.

  • Danny says:

    One attraction for expats like me living overseas with UK bank accounts who are continually frustrated by all these great cards we can’t sign up for is that Currensea doesn’t seem to be limited to UK residents. Are any of these other cards (Revolut, Monzo, etc.) available to non-UK residents? (Curve definitely isn’t).

  • Rob says:

    £20k is not exactly average though is it …. in the same way that you’d happily buy a bottle of wine in the corner shop if you only wanted one but if you wanted 500 bottles you’d make more of an effort to get the best deal.

    • Ed_fly says:

      I’ve been using chase for overseas spend, the 1% has been great. though unless I’m missing something I do need to transfer money into my chase account ahead of spending, which does involve some planning ahead of the holiday of likely expenditure etc, this currensea card would remove that effort (to some extent as would to leave money in current account regardless).

      • Maples says:

        I just have a holiday fund that I access using the Chase account and has been fine for me. Do end up blowing past it and end up having to make transfers from the saver accounts.

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

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