Int'l Credit Card
#4
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Jan 2006
Position: ANC-Based MD-11 FO
Posts: 328
USAA debit card. No int'l fees and no ATM conversion fees plus a rebate for non-system ATM fees, debit card fees and they pay interest. Amounts of rebates and interest are less than a dollar but the ATM useage fee rebates are full cost of non-network ATM fees. Allowed up to 10 (I think) non-network withdrawls per month without paying a fee. And USAA is part of the Key Bank network so withdrawls made at their ATMs don't count toward your fee-less transactions.
#7
Actually I was wrong on Citibank & US Bank. Here is some more information.
Whale
Capital One: 0% transaction fee. Capital One does not impose a fee, and it also eats the 1% fee that Visa or MasterCard impose.
Discover: 0% transaction fee. However, Discover is accepted on a limited basis outside of North America.
Washington Mutual: 1% transaction fee.
American Express: 2%.
Pulaski Bank: 2%.
Barclays/Juniper Bank: 2% to 3%, depending on card.
Bank of America: 3%.
Chase: 3%.
Citibank: 3%.
GE Money: 3%.
HSBC: 1% to 3%, depending on card.
U.S. Bancorp (U.S. Bank): 3%.
Wells Fargo: 3%
Whale
Capital One: 0% transaction fee. Capital One does not impose a fee, and it also eats the 1% fee that Visa or MasterCard impose.
Discover: 0% transaction fee. However, Discover is accepted on a limited basis outside of North America.
Washington Mutual: 1% transaction fee.
American Express: 2%.
Pulaski Bank: 2%.
Barclays/Juniper Bank: 2% to 3%, depending on card.
Bank of America: 3%.
Chase: 3%.
Citibank: 3%.
GE Money: 3%.
HSBC: 1% to 3%, depending on card.
U.S. Bancorp (U.S. Bank): 3%.
Wells Fargo: 3%
Last edited by Whale Pilot; 09-02-2007 at 06:51 AM. Reason: add info.
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