carride
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- Feb 5, 2013
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You can learn the rate each day to decide how to shop that entire day, knowing that it is fixed. My statement was only that your estimation of 10% less than official rate was very wrong for the June-23 day we were discussing. So far this year it has never been close to your stated percentage.
- It should state up to 10%. 4.11% is your estimation for one single given day, providing a range is more useful.
This is not at all true for foreign card purchases in Argentina. You are reading from the wrong Visa credit card page, which explain how it is done when traveling to many countries in the world. You need to read the Argentina version which has not changed since 2022-Dec-15.
- The bank rates you provide imply a ~2% buy and sell fee. Visa provides a wholesale exchange rate that is "generally very close to the interbank or mid-market rate". So the comparison should be to the rate you would get if VISA performed transactions based on official rate not the argentine banks buy/sell rate.
Exchange rate | Dollar Foreign Tourists
If you travel to Argentina, make all your purchases with your Visa, you pay safely and with an exclusive dollar rate for foreign tourists. Learn more!
Mastercard further explains “This exchange rate is communicated by the Argentine Chamber of Credit Cards (ATACYC) daily”. Assuming ATACYC is communicating that MEP reference point.
Yes correct. Since this years IMF loan, the gap between the MEP and the Official rate has almost closed. So now, unfortunately for expats, the foreign exchange conversion rate with credit cards has dipped below the official. It had always been above the official rate since December 2022, until now.
- the MEP has gone much lower than the official recently, which pushes the difference higher
The Visa rate is set at midnight each day, and so will not change again until the next day, Mastercard seems to set at 4pm. They use the previous days MEP market close value as a reference to set conversion rate. Not the exact MEP rate, but slightly lower which experience has shown us to be 3-8% less than MEP.
You are confusing the Revolut currency exchange feature as it applies to exchanging money to/from your cash accounts. This has nothing to do with using Revolut card purchases in Argentina.
- Bank fees depends on your card providers, even if they charge 0% fees they may have weekend fees up to 1% such as Revolut.