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On 4/30/2025 3:26 PM, -hh wrote:Yes, more than your 3.5% guess. And no, its not any sort of exchange rate scam/tax evasion/etc: we're just a good repeat customer, so we got a quite favorable rate.On 4/16/25 11:17, Tom Elam wrote:Wow, $954 for cash instead of credit card? At 3.5% expense to that provider that's a ~$27,000 expense. I'm guessing that the discount was a lot more than 3.5%. So why, if that is the case? Where is the accommodation provider saving more than credit card expense? Taxes? An exchange rate scam? My curious mind wants to know.On 4/2/2025 3:33 PM, -hh wrote:>On 4/1/25 18:15, Tom Elam wrote:>[...]>
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Hugh, there are bills like income taxes, property taxes and our electric bill that we pay with direct debit rather than a credit card. Why? The credit card service fees exceed the 2% cash back on my card. I always watch for those fees, but have not ever see a 10%.
I don't believe that I've seen 10% before either, but now I have.
>However, a travel agency we use charges 5%. I send a check.>
Merely an illustration of attention to detail for each vendor. As I've mentioned before, a goodly number of my local small merchants do have "cash discounts" (eg, CC surcharges) and they're greater than 2%.
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Of course for travel, there's also a risk trade-off here, as using a credit card offers some additional protections vs cash.
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>During 2024 ...>
That's really your business.
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-hh
I never said that a credit card is ALWAYS the way to go.
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Its what you implied when you said that you've never seen merchant signs for CC surcharges/Cash discounts ... and that's a claim that you repeat once again below:
>There are many exceptions, and I cited some. However, for day-to-day payments my 2% card is the way to go, as is my 5%-back Target DEBIT card. Exceptions include paying taxes. I use direct debit for IRS and Indiana Dept. of Revenue for estimated taxes. Same for property taxes. No fee for these using direct debit, 3% or more for a credit card. Same for my utility bills.>
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As for our small local businesses I do not think I have ever seen a sign for cash discount. Certainly not at chain stores.
See?
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>All that said, last year we earned about $1,500 on our 2% credit (and 5% at Target) rebate cards. I drove my Accord 15,600 miles on $1,070 of fuel (I have a Google Drive spreadsheet.) Our total gasoline cost was $1,660 (Quicken). So the rebates almost paid for our auto fuel.>
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The $1,500 in rebates is about $30,000 in spending. Total spend was $185,000 give or take.
Whereas the trip we've just returned from had a $954 savings from just from our accommodations being cash instead of CC, and is this year's example of the potential from just offering the cash alternative.
>There were big chunks that were a credit card was not the best>
way to pay, or the vendor required a check. Almost nothing was
cash. Well, the neighborhood cat sitter was about $1,000 because were were gone so much, was all cash.
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Cash for international travel is not advisable in most countries. It does come in handy for tips, taxi fares, etc. For most expenses I use credit cards not for the rebate but for fraud protection. If I need cash there is usually a bank ATM available.
The use of credit has been on a big upswing. We've been doing that too, although we still like having 'starting cash' in small denominations (& coins) for international destinations for small incidentals...plus to use where credit card theft is a concern.
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Likewise, there can be ATMs as an option as well - if there is one on the island (and its not out of service)! These are considerations which aren't really germane to saving money from CC "cash back" features.
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-hh
We are on the way home from Zygreb tomorrow. It's been 2 weeks in Italy and Croatia. My travel company is a sold proprietor LLC and takes checks only. So unlike cash there are traceable records. He is reputable, and certainly offers no discount for actual cash.Oh, I have a receipts too, so there's traceable records in case I had to file some sort of travel insurance claim/etc. Checking the rental car's receipt, it shows a -5% cash discount.
This trip did not include airfare, and airlines do not offer cash discounts. About 2/3 of the meal expense, all hotels, bus transport and numerous included attraction admissions were included in the package. One meal was quite memorable. Eight courses at a Michelin Star restaurant at the 5 star hotel where we spent 5 nights.One obtains trip memories in different ways; for this year, it was that the weather enabled multiple 'green flash' sunsets which we enjoyed.
For the rest I took a few hundred Euro out of bank ATMs and put some on my credit cards. Nobody had a cash discount offered, and I did not ask. One small purchase on a family farm operation was made with PayPal using 0 fee friends and family terms because I ran low on cash and they did not take cards.Its quite easy to overlook cc surcharges at small businesses, such as for a lunch; locally, I'm finding 3% to be common, although some with website ordering systems are adding a $1 "convenience fee" now too.
One meal was at a motorway Croatia McDonald's. New and very modern, it was VERY different from the U.S. Totally different menu, extensive coffee/tea bar, and quite a dessert selection.Yes, they've become quite nice and are quite different. I ended my personal snob 'boycott' of overseas McD's some time ago; most recent visit was in Tokyo...found eggs on top of many burgers. I think the time before that was the same café style in a rest stop near Bratislava.
This is Europe after all. Pretty sophisticated.
Ever been to Croatia? My first trip, and the country is stunning.Not yet; heard good things about it from a friend that's been there several times .. their main complaint had been that its been overrun with Russians, but that might have been dated by pre-2022 visits, as they've also commented that there's fewer Russians now in Czechia.
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