Accessing Money from US
I will likely open a bank account in Mexico but am unsure whether I will transfer a big chunk of money from my US account into my Mexican bank account or will just withdraw from my US account via ATM and use my US debit card.
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mejms wrote:Moving from Boston to Queretaro in about a month and will continue to have income deposited into my US bank account. Would love to hear how people access their money.
I will likely open a bank account in Mexico but am unsure whether I will transfer a big chunk of money from my US account into my Mexican bank account or will just withdraw from my US account via ATM and use my US debit card.
I would suggest that you use the second option. Moving money from the U.S. to another country gets a lot of attention from people like the IRS. I keep it simple by leaving the money in my U.S. account, informing my bank that I will be using my debit card in a foreign country, and keeping it simple. You can open a Mexican Bank account and keep the deposit under the automatic trigger point, which still seems to be 10,000 U.S. This system has worked very well for me., There are Mexican banks with U.S. affiliations although not as many as there used to be. It's easy to run a computer search on which Mexican banks have U.S. connections.https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/careers/companies/top-banks-in-mexico/
As for Mexican banks with US connections, I'm not sure this really exists. I have a US Santander bank account and there is no connection with Mexican Santander. There is actually less of a fee to withdraw from my TD bank account at a Mexican Santander ATM than to withdraw from my US Santander account. No advantage to having a Mexican Santander account and US Santander account as far as I know. If you know of a bank that does offer advantages, please let me know.
I'll need to look into how to have some more money available when first getting settled in. Month to month living will be fine via ATM withdrawals, but won't be practical when first arriving (buying car, starting lease, school for kids).
I have a few US credit cards, all of which charge a foreign transaction fee. My TD bank debit card does not charge a transaction fee. Debating using it vs applying for another US credit card with no transaction fee vs applying for a credit card in Mexico.
LaloSMA wrote:Do you advise your bank in the US that you are living in another country? What is their response. I have heard of people having their accounts frozen when the US bank figured out they lived in Mexico. Some of those affected said they had to fly back to the US to get the problem fixed. Pretty scary stuff.
This is why I recently decided to open a bank that is strictly online. Went with Ally. I figure that if there is an issue with me being out of the country for an extended period of time, they won't be able to tell me that I have to visit a branch (since they don't have branches at all). They did say that travel advisories can only be issued for 6 month periods, so we'll see what happens.
that is pretty much the effective way to do it. I would add be consistent. I have a consistent pattern. I limit the banks that I use my debit card in. Actually, I tend to use only one bank. My bank and my cards know what to expect. At first, they would block the use after a few months, then I called them. After a while, they just watched my pattern. Now I have no problem. I am also limiting risk by using the credit card for only hotels or major purchases in my city.
I opened a Schwab savings account with just $10,000 U.S. I use ATMs here to withdraw funds -
Schwab allows me to make 6 withdrawals a month so the more cash I can take out each time, the better.
Mexican banks have different limits on how much you can withdraw at a time. I have found that HSBC allows the most cash at a time, $15,000 MX.
I use U.S. credit cards for all restaurants, groceries, Costco, Home Depot, etc. so I only need cash to pay my rent and buy small items from small vendors. My cards are B of A and Citi. There have no foreign transaction fees. I keep a U.S. address (my daughter's) where I get the few pieces of mail that I cannot change to electronic delivery and she emails me letting me know if I need to take care of anything.
Did you say you have a Bank Of America credit card and they don't charge foreign transaction fees?
I'm got an Alaska Airlines BA card and would love to keep it, but I thought they charged fees for that. Not certain. Your thoughts? Would love to keep that card, because of the free miles.
Walter Hodges
With Southwest flying daily to Cuba now, how will the banks do that? Will they block the accounts of everybody on every plane? Insanity!
There was no problem with AmEx, they figured out we're traveling a lot. AmEx charges the merchants higher transaction fees than VISA or MC, that's why a lot of small merchants won't accept it.
jamesr3939 wrote:I don't use Fidelity. I use USAA and SCHWAB who reimburse for ATM fees. I heard Ally does also. I have a CU account also that uses co-op ATM's and they don't charge fees at all. I haven't looked to see if the co-op network is in Mexico I guess I should.
Ally reimburses up to $10 per month of US ATM fees, but none abroad.
WalterHodges wrote:I've heard a number of comments over the past few months giving Transferwise a very good grade. Anyone else used them? I heard their fees are less than just about anywhere and it's easy to use and very reliable. Are there some confirmations out there that agree with this? Is Transferwise something to seriously consider?
They offer the exchange rates that are publicly posted, the rate that you see when you Google USD Mexico exchange rate. They then charge their fees. You can go to their website without even logging in and see exactly how much the transfer would get you and cost you
No other service or bank does this. I appreciate that transparency and it does add up to more dollars in your pocket.
Haven't used it yet, but will soon.
Lake1buffalo1 wrote:I would say keep you card that you have had for mileage for when your in the states....apply for a Bank America card that charges no international fee....we have one...it works well..never an International fee...and you get the current rate of exchange...being it does change daily....
You get the current rate of exchange? I doubt that the bank is giving the mid-market rate that you would find if you searched on Google. Banks, PayPal, Xoom, etc all make money factored into the currency conversion that they offer. There might not be a foreign transaction fee, but they're making money off of your international purchases through that exchange rate.
but they turn into the perfect political animal when it comes to describing the formulas for exchange rates. That's where the real money is located and they don't promote it or make it easy to find. Still searching today. I'll report back.
You won't find a bank or other financial institution that will offer you that though. That's why I opted for Transferwise. It's the only one that does as far as I've seen.
Grupo FAMSA, Soriana- Comercial Mexicana, Telecomm Telégrafos, Farmacias Guadalajara, Bodega Aurrera, Walmart, Suburbia, and Superama.
So the result was 96% of the international exchange rate, so did a calculation of all my withdrawals for 2018 adding all fees paid using my Canadian ATM card (3$/withdrawal) and always withdrawing the maximums allowed at the Mexican ATM (HSBC $15000 pesos, Banorte $20000 pesos, Ban Bajio $10000 pesos) the results were average of 14.42 pesos per $CA while the Bank of Canada average was 14.72 pesos per $CA or 98% of the average...Very good for me. Will do the same at end of 2019.
Adios y buen dia a todos, GyC.
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