Domestic travel budgets are straightforward. International adds layers - currency exchange losses, foreign transaction fees, ATM charges, costs that vary wildly from what guidebooks estimate. Understanding these costs before leaving helps avoid expensive surprises.
The Hidden Cost of Currency Exchange
The exchange rate on Google isn’t the rate you’ll get. Every service builds in a margin between the mid-market rate (what currencies actually trade at) and the rate offered to consumers. These margins vary dramatically.
Banks typically add 2-4% above mid-market rate. Airport exchange kiosks take 8-15% - the convenience comes at a steep price. Hotel exchanges fall somewhere in between at 5-10%. ATMs abroad usually offer the best rates at 1-3% above mid-market.
On $1,000 exchanged, an airport kiosk might cost $100+ more than using an ATM abroad. Over a two-week trip with significant spending, these differences compound.
Where to exchange, roughly from best to worst: ATMs abroad using a no-fee debit card offer the best rates for most travelers. Your bank before travel typically offers fair rates without the pressure of needing cash immediately. Local banks abroad sometimes offer competitive rates. Exchange bureaus vary widely - worth checking the rate before committing. Hotels are a last resort with poor rates but sometimes necessary. Airports offer the worst rates and are worth avoiding except for minimal amounts needed immediately upon arrival.
Foreign Transaction Fees
Most credit and debit cards charge 1-3% on every foreign currency transaction. This applies to purchases made abroad and sometimes to purchases from foreign companies even when you’re home.
On a $3,000 trip with 3% foreign transaction fees, that’s $90 in fees - money that could have been spent on the trip itself.
Cards without foreign transaction fees exist. Chase Sapphire, Capital One Venture, and many airline cards waive these fees. For frequent international travelers, these cards are worth considering - the fee savings over a single trip can offset annual card costs.
Dynamic Currency Conversion Trap
When paying abroad, merchants sometimes offer to charge in USD instead of local currency. This is called dynamic currency conversion, and it’s worth declining.
The merchant sets the conversion rate, and it’s typically 3-7% worse than what your credit card would charge. Choosing local currency when the terminal asks gets you your credit card’s conversion rate, which almost always beats the merchant’s.
ATM Fees Abroad
ATM withdrawals abroad can incur multiple fees from different sources: your bank’s foreign ATM fee ($2-5), the ATM operator’s fee, foreign transaction percentages, and sometimes poor exchange rates built into the transaction.
Several approaches minimize these costs. Use partner ATMs - Bank of America’s Global ATM Alliance, for example, waives fees at partner banks in many countries. Withdraw larger amounts to reduce the number of transactions if flat fees apply. Use no-fee cards like Charles Schwab, which reimburses all ATM fees worldwide. Always decline the ATM’s offer to convert currency - withdraw in local currency and let your bank handle the conversion.
Real Costs vs. Guidebook Estimates
Guidebooks are often outdated by the time you read them. Several factors cause estimates to diverge from reality.
Inflation affects international costs just like domestic ones. A 2023 guidebook underestimates 2026 costs by 10-20% in most destinations. Post-pandemic tourism pricing has accelerated this in many popular areas.
Tourist pricing creates pockets of higher costs. Popular areas charge more than local neighborhoods. Eating at restaurants near major attractions costs significantly more than places a few blocks away where locals eat.
Your travel style matters. Budget guides assume budget travel - hostels, street food, public transit. If you prefer private rooms over dorm beds, restaurants over cooking, or taxis over buses, adjust estimates upward accordingly.
Seasonality swings costs dramatically. High season typically costs 20-50% more than shoulder or low season for accommodation especially. Flight prices vary similarly.
Building Your Budget
Creating an accurate international travel budget requires research, conversion, and adding layers for fees and uncertainty.
Research current costs using travel forums and recent blog posts. These sources provide more current pricing than printed guidebooks. Look for posts from the past 6-12 months for relevant numbers.
Convert to your currency using the current rate, then add 5-10% buffer for exchange losses and rate fluctuations between now and your trip.
Add fee categories that international travel specifically requires.
| Item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Flights | Usually paid in dollars |
| Accommodation | Local currency |
| Food, activities, transport | Local currency |
| Exchange fees | 2-3% of total |
| ATM fees | Estimate based on withdrawals |
| Buffer | 10-15% of total |
Sample Budget: 10 Days in Portugal (2 people)
Here’s what a moderate international trip budget might look like in practice. Portugal represents a mid-range European destination.
| Category | USD |
|---|---|
| Flights | $1,200 |
| Hotels (9 nights) | $1,485 |
| Food | $770 |
| Local transport | $165 |
| Activities | $330 |
| Miscellaneous | $220 |
| Exchange/fees (3%) | $125 |
| Buffer (10%) | $430 |
| Total | $4,725 |
Note that exchange fees and buffer add nearly $600 to the base costs. These are real expenses that many travelers underbudget.
Common Questions
Does it make sense to buy foreign currency before leaving?
Worth getting some for immediate expenses upon arrival - taxi from airport, snacks, tips. Maybe $100-200 equivalent. ATMs abroad usually offer better rates for larger amounts, so exchanging significant sums before departure typically costs more.
How much cash is appropriate to carry?
Enough for a few days of expenses plus an emergency reserve. This varies by destination - some countries are heavily cash-based while others accept cards almost everywhere. Research your specific destination’s norms before deciding.
What happens if a card is declined abroad?
This happens more often than people expect. Notify your bank of travel plans before leaving. Carry a backup card from a different issuer - Visa and Mastercard have different acceptance in some regions. Know your PINs for all cards since chip-and-PIN is standard in most of the world.