Worst Travel Scams
The costliest rip-offs can come from legitimate businesses. Here's what to watch for.
Illustration by Andre da Loba
When you pay with plastic overseas, your credit card used to dock you anywhere from 1 to 3 percent of the purchase price as an exchange fee, even though the switch costs the company practically nothing. But that wasn't enough. Recently, cards have imposed foreign-transaction fees on any purchase made with a foreign company, even if it's done online in your country and in your native currency. Ridiculous? Totally. Often, when a credit card is challenged on this absurd new fee, it backs down and refunds its ill-gotten gains. If you do a lot of travel, you might want to consider a bank that doesn't charge a transaction fee, like Capital One, or take your business to a credit union.
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