Best Credit Card for 2 weeks in Norway
Best Credit Card for 2 weeks in Norway
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Discussion

56Lotus

Original Poster:

241 posts

175 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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I'm taking the family on holiday for 2 weeks in Norway. Our UK debit & credit cards aren't recommended for use overseas with higher charges on transactions. I'm looking for a credit card to use for 2 weeks and then pay off. We wont be withdrawing cash from machines as we've been told that most places in Norway are now card only.

The bit of research I've done before getting confused seems to suggest something like a Barclay Card Rewards Visa.

Can anyone help with some advice?

Thanks

Jon

Ussrcossack

868 posts

63 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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Halifax Clarity credit card

No charges for use abroad and exchange rate is usually reasonable

HiAsAKite

2,511 posts

268 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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Cant offer advice on specific credit/debit cards, but Norway is pretty much cashless.

Have been going for work repeatedly over several years for weeks at a time, and can safely say I've never even seen the physical currency.

NB Norweigen Krone has been dropping relative to GBP so as far as Norway goes, it's relatively "cheap"* at the moment.


*not cheap at all.. but relative to 2-3 years ago it is


Shnozz

29,808 posts

292 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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2 weeks with a family in Norway? A card with a high limit is my suggestion.

snuffy

11,985 posts

305 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
Shnozz said:
2 weeks with a family in Norway? A card with a high limit is my suggestion.
Beat me to it !

tog

4,856 posts

249 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
I did a three week road trip with the family to Norway lasy year and with one exception didn't use physical currency or even a physical card at all - just my regular card via Apple Pay all the way. I don't know which specific card might be best however.

(The one exception was the Elbe river ferry, which was cash only and by pure luck my wife had just enough euros in her handbag, with a few cents left over for the kids to buy a lollipop on board.)

RizzoTheRat

27,758 posts

213 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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A simple option is a preload card like Caxton.

If you want something more like a traditional bank card, albeit debit rather than credit, look opening an account with a a "challenger" bank like Starling or Revolut. The advantage of these is you can transfer money in when the exchange rate looks best.

For Credit cards, Halifax Clarity is often recommended but I've not tried it. Santander's All In One card doesn't charge for foreign transactions, but there is a £3/month fee

Jordie Barretts sock

6,018 posts

40 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
Surely the obvious choice is open a Revolut account?

Transfer money to Revolut and it pays in the local currency. Option for a physical card and/or a virtual card also Apple/Google Pay.

Favourable exchange rate with no commission charged.

Mammasaid

5,196 posts

118 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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If you've got a First Direct account, that's fee free for overseas spending and at ATMs, otherwise use one of these;

https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/travel/cheap-tra...

Ranger 6

7,520 posts

270 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
Ussrcossack said:
Halifax Clarity credit card

No charges for use abroad and exchange rate is usually reasonable
This - been using one for years

It's the best way to pay in local currency

ComStrike

466 posts

114 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
Jordie Barretts sock said:
Surely the obvious choice is open a Revolut account?

Transfer money to Revolut and it pays in the local currency. Option for a physical card and/or a virtual card also Apple/Google Pay.

Favourable exchange rate with no commission charged.
100% Agree

56Lotus

Original Poster:

241 posts

175 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all

Thanks for all the suggestions gents

However small fly in ointment.

I applied for a Halifax Clarity Credit card but was turned down.

I earn 50K, wife (who earns more) , 2 kids, small mortgage (sub 100k), no other debt. I have a credit card from my bank which I use online but pay off each month.

Phoned Halifax but no one could explain why, I have to request in writing.

Would have thought I'd have been a safe risk but apparently not.

Will look at a prepayment card.

Jon





chip*

1,566 posts

249 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
Ussrcossack said:
Halifax Clarity credit card

No charges for use abroad and exchange rate is usually reasonable
It doesn't matter which card credit card you use as the same exchange rate as determined by the card provider i.e, it's either the VISA or Mastercard exchange rate. Some cc may charge a foreign transaction fee for usage, but many are free these days. The other differences are the reward scheme, maybe monthly/annual fee etc..

https://wise.com/gb/blog/credit-card-best-currency...

Jordie Barretts sock

6,018 posts

40 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
Revolut isn't prepayment it's a separate bank account. A lot of ex pats use it because of it's ease of use and currency conversion.

Will take you five minutes.

mcflurry

9,184 posts

274 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
quotequote all
HiAsAKite said:
NB Norweigen Krone has been dropping relative to GBP so as far as Norway goes, it's relatively "cheap"* at the moment.

*not cheap at all.. but relative to 2-3 years ago it is
I think the UK price rises and the FX rate moving to 14:1 are making Norway look semi respectable. They also don't have the silly tipping culture.

A coffee is about NOK59 but then a cappuccino in London is £4. Lunch today in Bergen was NOK 200 a head for a panini with salad and a coke at a nice cafe..

RC1807

13,454 posts

189 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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Just quickly checked Revolut. NOK accounts available.

recordman

435 posts

146 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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Barclaycard Rewards Visa credit card is as good as Halifax Clarity credit card, and pays a small (0.25%) cashback. Can also be used with withdraw cash at ATMs without being charged interest if it's paid off in full on or before the due date. Obviously, at the ATM do not elect to be charged in GBP.

A Starling debit card is also very competitive.

Trustmeimadoctor

14,258 posts

176 months

Wednesday 31st July 2024
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The problem is getting a barcleycard!

Their acceptance criteria are a bloody mystery

SuperCharged V6

835 posts

215 months

Saturday 3rd August 2024
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I have been using the Chase card, free overseas transactions, 1% cash back and zero problems

https://www.chase.co.uk/gb/en/?utm_source=google&a...

Everything is run off the app. Simples

RichFN2

4,153 posts

200 months

Saturday 3rd August 2024
quotequote all
SuperCharged V6 said:
I have been using the Chase card, free overseas transactions, 1% cash back and zero problems

https://www.chase.co.uk/gb/en/?utm_source=google&a...

Everything is run off the app. Simples
Another vote for Chase, the added benefit is it's a normal debit card and your currency exchange rate isn't locked in like some of these preloaded cards. Another bonus is just about everywhere accepts MasterCard.