Switzerland credit/bank card acceptance, cash requirement
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Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland? Can I buy train tickets using those cards? How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
I know in Germany there is a problem with non-Germany issued cards (EC-Karten?), so I suspect there might be a similar situation in Switzerland.
payment-cards switzerland
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up vote
3
down vote
favorite
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland? Can I buy train tickets using those cards? How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
I know in Germany there is a problem with non-Germany issued cards (EC-Karten?), so I suspect there might be a similar situation in Switzerland.
payment-cards switzerland
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland? Can I buy train tickets using those cards? How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
I know in Germany there is a problem with non-Germany issued cards (EC-Karten?), so I suspect there might be a similar situation in Switzerland.
payment-cards switzerland
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland? Can I buy train tickets using those cards? How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
I know in Germany there is a problem with non-Germany issued cards (EC-Karten?), so I suspect there might be a similar situation in Switzerland.
payment-cards switzerland
edited Jul 7 at 3:35
Mark Mayoâ¦
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128k745461259
asked Jun 22 at 21:56
M4ks
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209110
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland?
Yes, stores that accept credit cards will accept foreign credit cards as well.
Somtimes AmEx cards (no matter if domestic or foreign) were not accepted because of their vendor fees, but recently this seems to have gotten better, so if you only have an "exotic" card like Diners Club, JCB and the like, you may want to carry a more "common" card as backup.
Can I buy train tickets using those cards?
From a counter: Yes, no problem.
From a ticket machine: Yes, if your card doesn't have a chip/PIN, it might get rejected if the amount is above a certain limit (this might depend on your card issuer).
From a bus driver: No, cash only.
If you want to be sure, buy your tickets at a counter or a ticket machine, especially since you can easily buy return tickets or tickets to be validated at a later date.
Also, pretty much all public transport in Switzerland are in a fare system, so a ticket counter can sell you tickets for any connection between two public transport stops in Switzerland.
How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
Cash is still king, see Bloomberg, so some smaller stores/restaurants might not accept cards at all, some stores (discounters) only debit cards like Maestro (MasterCard) and occasionally V Pay (Visa), but generally you will not have problems paying by card in Switzerland with contactless payments getting more and more widespread.
If you carry cash, breaking large bills (CHF 200, CHF 100) during purchases is not a problem, ATMs will accept international cards and dispense you any denomination starting from CHF 20/CHF 50.
Source: Ticket office clerk at a major Swiss public transport company
Welcome to the site Billetverkäufer. Very good answer, thanks.
â Willekeâ¦
Jul 7 at 20:26
Having lived in CH for most of the past 10 years, I have touched actual cash only a handful of times. There's no aversion to cash as one might find in Scandinavian countries but you can comfortably get by on credit and debit cards alone.
â VH-NZZ
Aug 18 at 2:29
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland?
Yes, stores that accept credit cards will accept foreign credit cards as well.
Somtimes AmEx cards (no matter if domestic or foreign) were not accepted because of their vendor fees, but recently this seems to have gotten better, so if you only have an "exotic" card like Diners Club, JCB and the like, you may want to carry a more "common" card as backup.
Can I buy train tickets using those cards?
From a counter: Yes, no problem.
From a ticket machine: Yes, if your card doesn't have a chip/PIN, it might get rejected if the amount is above a certain limit (this might depend on your card issuer).
From a bus driver: No, cash only.
If you want to be sure, buy your tickets at a counter or a ticket machine, especially since you can easily buy return tickets or tickets to be validated at a later date.
Also, pretty much all public transport in Switzerland are in a fare system, so a ticket counter can sell you tickets for any connection between two public transport stops in Switzerland.
How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
Cash is still king, see Bloomberg, so some smaller stores/restaurants might not accept cards at all, some stores (discounters) only debit cards like Maestro (MasterCard) and occasionally V Pay (Visa), but generally you will not have problems paying by card in Switzerland with contactless payments getting more and more widespread.
If you carry cash, breaking large bills (CHF 200, CHF 100) during purchases is not a problem, ATMs will accept international cards and dispense you any denomination starting from CHF 20/CHF 50.
Source: Ticket office clerk at a major Swiss public transport company
Welcome to the site Billetverkäufer. Very good answer, thanks.
â Willekeâ¦
Jul 7 at 20:26
Having lived in CH for most of the past 10 years, I have touched actual cash only a handful of times. There's no aversion to cash as one might find in Scandinavian countries but you can comfortably get by on credit and debit cards alone.
â VH-NZZ
Aug 18 at 2:29
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland?
Yes, stores that accept credit cards will accept foreign credit cards as well.
Somtimes AmEx cards (no matter if domestic or foreign) were not accepted because of their vendor fees, but recently this seems to have gotten better, so if you only have an "exotic" card like Diners Club, JCB and the like, you may want to carry a more "common" card as backup.
Can I buy train tickets using those cards?
From a counter: Yes, no problem.
From a ticket machine: Yes, if your card doesn't have a chip/PIN, it might get rejected if the amount is above a certain limit (this might depend on your card issuer).
From a bus driver: No, cash only.
If you want to be sure, buy your tickets at a counter or a ticket machine, especially since you can easily buy return tickets or tickets to be validated at a later date.
Also, pretty much all public transport in Switzerland are in a fare system, so a ticket counter can sell you tickets for any connection between two public transport stops in Switzerland.
How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
Cash is still king, see Bloomberg, so some smaller stores/restaurants might not accept cards at all, some stores (discounters) only debit cards like Maestro (MasterCard) and occasionally V Pay (Visa), but generally you will not have problems paying by card in Switzerland with contactless payments getting more and more widespread.
If you carry cash, breaking large bills (CHF 200, CHF 100) during purchases is not a problem, ATMs will accept international cards and dispense you any denomination starting from CHF 20/CHF 50.
Source: Ticket office clerk at a major Swiss public transport company
Welcome to the site Billetverkäufer. Very good answer, thanks.
â Willekeâ¦
Jul 7 at 20:26
Having lived in CH for most of the past 10 years, I have touched actual cash only a handful of times. There's no aversion to cash as one might find in Scandinavian countries but you can comfortably get by on credit and debit cards alone.
â VH-NZZ
Aug 18 at 2:29
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland?
Yes, stores that accept credit cards will accept foreign credit cards as well.
Somtimes AmEx cards (no matter if domestic or foreign) were not accepted because of their vendor fees, but recently this seems to have gotten better, so if you only have an "exotic" card like Diners Club, JCB and the like, you may want to carry a more "common" card as backup.
Can I buy train tickets using those cards?
From a counter: Yes, no problem.
From a ticket machine: Yes, if your card doesn't have a chip/PIN, it might get rejected if the amount is above a certain limit (this might depend on your card issuer).
From a bus driver: No, cash only.
If you want to be sure, buy your tickets at a counter or a ticket machine, especially since you can easily buy return tickets or tickets to be validated at a later date.
Also, pretty much all public transport in Switzerland are in a fare system, so a ticket counter can sell you tickets for any connection between two public transport stops in Switzerland.
How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
Cash is still king, see Bloomberg, so some smaller stores/restaurants might not accept cards at all, some stores (discounters) only debit cards like Maestro (MasterCard) and occasionally V Pay (Visa), but generally you will not have problems paying by card in Switzerland with contactless payments getting more and more widespread.
If you carry cash, breaking large bills (CHF 200, CHF 100) during purchases is not a problem, ATMs will accept international cards and dispense you any denomination starting from CHF 20/CHF 50.
Source: Ticket office clerk at a major Swiss public transport company
Are Visa/Mastercard/AmEx (UK issued) widely accepted in Switzerland?
Yes, stores that accept credit cards will accept foreign credit cards as well.
Somtimes AmEx cards (no matter if domestic or foreign) were not accepted because of their vendor fees, but recently this seems to have gotten better, so if you only have an "exotic" card like Diners Club, JCB and the like, you may want to carry a more "common" card as backup.
Can I buy train tickets using those cards?
From a counter: Yes, no problem.
From a ticket machine: Yes, if your card doesn't have a chip/PIN, it might get rejected if the amount is above a certain limit (this might depend on your card issuer).
From a bus driver: No, cash only.
If you want to be sure, buy your tickets at a counter or a ticket machine, especially since you can easily buy return tickets or tickets to be validated at a later date.
Also, pretty much all public transport in Switzerland are in a fare system, so a ticket counter can sell you tickets for any connection between two public transport stops in Switzerland.
How popular is card usage, aka. is it necessary to carry cash?
Cash is still king, see Bloomberg, so some smaller stores/restaurants might not accept cards at all, some stores (discounters) only debit cards like Maestro (MasterCard) and occasionally V Pay (Visa), but generally you will not have problems paying by card in Switzerland with contactless payments getting more and more widespread.
If you carry cash, breaking large bills (CHF 200, CHF 100) during purchases is not a problem, ATMs will accept international cards and dispense you any denomination starting from CHF 20/CHF 50.
Source: Ticket office clerk at a major Swiss public transport company
answered Jul 7 at 15:29
Billetverkäufer
561
561
Welcome to the site Billetverkäufer. Very good answer, thanks.
â Willekeâ¦
Jul 7 at 20:26
Having lived in CH for most of the past 10 years, I have touched actual cash only a handful of times. There's no aversion to cash as one might find in Scandinavian countries but you can comfortably get by on credit and debit cards alone.
â VH-NZZ
Aug 18 at 2:29
add a comment |Â
Welcome to the site Billetverkäufer. Very good answer, thanks.
â Willekeâ¦
Jul 7 at 20:26
Having lived in CH for most of the past 10 years, I have touched actual cash only a handful of times. There's no aversion to cash as one might find in Scandinavian countries but you can comfortably get by on credit and debit cards alone.
â VH-NZZ
Aug 18 at 2:29
Welcome to the site Billetverkäufer. Very good answer, thanks.
â Willekeâ¦
Jul 7 at 20:26
Welcome to the site Billetverkäufer. Very good answer, thanks.
â Willekeâ¦
Jul 7 at 20:26
Having lived in CH for most of the past 10 years, I have touched actual cash only a handful of times. There's no aversion to cash as one might find in Scandinavian countries but you can comfortably get by on credit and debit cards alone.
â VH-NZZ
Aug 18 at 2:29
Having lived in CH for most of the past 10 years, I have touched actual cash only a handful of times. There's no aversion to cash as one might find in Scandinavian countries but you can comfortably get by on credit and debit cards alone.
â VH-NZZ
Aug 18 at 2:29
add a comment |Â
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