Travel Money UK 2026 — Best Way to Get Currency, Exchange Rates and Holiday Budgets

Cash or Card Abroad UK — Which Is Better in 2026?

Should you take cash or use a card when travelling from the UK? Here's an honest guide to when to use each — and the right combination for most destinations.

For most UK travellers to most destinations, the right answer is: primarily card with a small amount of local cash. Here is exactly how to think through the decision.

The Case for Fee-Free Cards

A fee-free travel card (Starling, Monzo, Chase, or a travel credit card) provides:

  • Better exchange rate than any cash bureau
  • Zero foreign transaction fees (with the right card)
  • Real-time notifications — you know immediately if fraud occurs
  • Instant freeze — lost or stolen card stopped in seconds via app
  • Spending records — useful for budgeting and expense tracking
  • No physical cash to lose or carry

For any country where card acceptance is widespread, fee-free cards beat cash on every metric that matters.

When Cash Is Necessary

SituationWhy cash is needed
Markets, street food, small vendorsCard readers rare or unreliable
Rural or less-developed areasInfrastructure supports cash only
Tips and gratuitiesConvention is to tip in local cash
Taxis (some drivers)Prefer cash or charge extra for card
Emergency card failureBackup cash gives resilience
Entry to some tourist sitesStill cash-only in some countries

Destination Guide — Cash Dependency Level

DestinationCard acceptanceCash recommendation
Western Europe (France, Spain, Portugal)High£100–£150 for incidentals
Germany, AustriaModerate£150–£200 (higher cash culture)
ScandinaviaVery highMinimal cash needed
Southeast Asia (Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia)Low–moderate£300–£500 for 2 weeks
USAHighMinimal
JapanModerate£200–£300 (transitioning)
Eastern EuropeModerate£150–£250

For most trips to developed destinations:

  1. Primary: Fee-free travel debit card (Starling or similar)
  2. Backup credit card: Fee-free travel credit card (Section 75 protection on big purchases)
  3. Local cash: Withdraw £100–£200 equivalent from a fee-free ATM on arrival

This combination gives you the best rates, protection, and resilience against card problems.

Keeping Your Money Secure Abroad

Whether you use cards, cash, or both, security matters more when you’re in an unfamiliar environment.

Cards:

  • Enable real-time transaction notifications (Starling, Monzo, Chase all do this automatically)
  • Set a PIN and memorise it — do not write it down
  • Use contactless and Apple/Google Pay where possible — the card never leaves your hand
  • Know how to freeze your card instantly via the app before you travel (test it)
  • Enable travel notifications with your card provider if required

Cash:

  • Never carry your entire cash supply in one place — split between wallet and hotel safe
  • Use a hotel safe for large amounts; carry only what you need for the day
  • Avoid ostentatious displays of cash in busy tourist areas or markets
  • Keep a small emergency reserve (£50–£100 equivalent) entirely separately from your main wallet

General:

  • Always carry at least two cards from different networks (Visa and Mastercard ideally)
  • Note your card issuers’ 24-hour emergency contact numbers before you travel — most UK apps have this in-app
  • Consider a travel money belt for carrying a backup card and emergency cash

What to Do if Your Wallet Is Stolen Abroad

Immediately:

  1. Freeze all affected cards via their apps — this takes seconds with Starling, Monzo, or Chase
  2. Call your card issuers on their emergency numbers (available on the FCA website or in your banking app)
  3. Report the theft to local police — you will need a police report reference number for insurance claims
  4. Contact your travel insurer — most policies cover cash theft up to a limit (typically £200–£500) with a police report

To access money:

  • If you have a backup card with a different issuer: use this immediately
  • Western Union or MoneyGram: friends or family in the UK can send emergency funds internationally within minutes
  • Your travel insurance emergency assistance line may be able to help with emergency cash advances

Prevention: Keep a digital photo of your passport, card numbers, and insurer contact details stored securely (e.g. in encrypted notes on your phone or in a secure email folder). This is invaluable if everything physical is stolen.

Contactless and Mobile Payments Abroad

Contactless payments (and Apple Pay / Google Pay) are increasingly accepted worldwide but coverage varies:

RegionContactless/mobile pay acceptance
UK, Western Europe, ScandinaviaVery high — nearly universal
USAHigh in cities; lower in rural areas
Australia, New ZealandHigh
JapanImproving rapidly; still mixed
Southeast AsiaLower; major cities OK
Eastern EuropeModerate

Mobile payment wallets (Apple Pay, Google Pay) work with most fee-free travel cards. Adding your Starling or Monzo card to your phone’s wallet means you can pay without the physical card — useful if the card is lost.

Getting Cash Abroad — ATM vs Bureau

MethodRateFeesRecommendation
ATM abroad with fee-free cardReal rate£0Best — do this
ATM abroad with standard UK cardReal rate2.75–3% + £2–3Expensive
Airport bureauPoor rate (8–12% margin)Usually noneAvoid
High-street bureau (pre-trip)Moderate rateSmall marginIf you need cash in advance
Online currency orderGood rateSmall marginOrder 2+ days before travel

The key rule: withdraw cash from ATMs abroad using a fee-free card rather than exchanging at a bureau. The rate is better and there’s no commission.

See Best Way to Exchange Currency UK for the full exchange comparison, and Travel Money Guide UK for the complete strategy.

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Spending money abroad
  2. FCO Travel Advice — entry requirements