The CitiBank down here is not actually the same corporation as the CitiBank in the US, as I understand it. It has to do with the banking laws of Argentina. I understand that no bank here that has the same name of any US bank (at least - HSBC I think is the same way, and I don't believe is a US bank) can be considered as a branch for such purposes because of the banking laws. Therefore, the ATMs are actually not part of the CitiBank ATM network that is the States.
I bank at a small regional bank in the US called Trustmark. $1.50 for each transaction and currency conversions always at the market rate, not even at the buy or sell rates. And I love the CitiBank ATMs here because they are the only ones at which I can get my ATM card's full daily limit when I need it, for paying things like rent. But since my bank is cool (unlike CitiBank in the US), I don't get charged the sames fees CitiBank users get charged!
I get charged nothing at all for any foreign purchase.
I have a Bank of America card that is outrageously expensive to use here. $5 fee, something like 3% international usage fee, and a worse conversion rate than the typical buy/sell currency rates. I never use it unless I have an emergency - and since I live here, I only use it to pay a few small bills I still have in the States, otherwise I would have gotten rid of it.
I also have a Schwab account which seems good, although I just recently opened it and don't have my ATM card yet, so I haven't tried it out.
There are banks out there that work well internationally - you just have to find them and screw the big banks that are out to get your money every way they can.
I bank at a small regional bank in the US called Trustmark. $1.50 for each transaction and currency conversions always at the market rate, not even at the buy or sell rates. And I love the CitiBank ATMs here because they are the only ones at which I can get my ATM card's full daily limit when I need it, for paying things like rent. But since my bank is cool (unlike CitiBank in the US), I don't get charged the sames fees CitiBank users get charged!
I get charged nothing at all for any foreign purchase.
I have a Bank of America card that is outrageously expensive to use here. $5 fee, something like 3% international usage fee, and a worse conversion rate than the typical buy/sell currency rates. I never use it unless I have an emergency - and since I live here, I only use it to pay a few small bills I still have in the States, otherwise I would have gotten rid of it.
I also have a Schwab account which seems good, although I just recently opened it and don't have my ATM card yet, so I haven't tried it out.
There are banks out there that work well internationally - you just have to find them and screw the big banks that are out to get your money every way they can.