TravelThailandAUD travellers
πŸ‡¦πŸ‡ΊAustralia travellersβ†’πŸ‡ΉπŸ‡­Thailand

Best AUD Card for Thailand β€” Zero Forex Fee Guide

Using a standard Australia bank card in Thailand costs β‰ˆ2.75–3.5% in currency fees per transaction. Zero-forex cards like Wise charge β‰ˆ0.0–0.15%. On a A$1,000 trip, you save up to β‰ˆA$30–50.

Zero-forex card cost

β‰ˆ0.0–0.15%

Standard bank cost

β‰ˆ2.75–3.5%

You save per A$1k

β‰ˆA$30–50

Spending AUD in Thailand: what you need to know

Local currency

Thai Baht (THB) ΰΈΏ

Cash necessity

High β€” Street food, temples, tuk-tuks, local markets β€” cash dominates. Carry 2,000–3,000 THB for daily expenses.

Card acceptance

Cards accepted widely at hotels, malls, and mid-range restaurants in cities. Street food, markets, tuk-tuks, and small guesthouses are cash-only. Budget travellers should carry more cash than city visitors.

ATM situation

ATMs are plentiful across Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket and most tourist areas. All charge a fixed 220 THB foreign card fee. AEON ATMs sometimes charge less (150 THB). DCC (Dynamic Currency Conversion) is offered constantly β€” always decline and pay in THB.

πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί Tip for Australia travellers in Thailand

Australian travellers should use Wise or the Macquarie Transaction Account (zero forex fee) for Thailand. The 220 THB ATM fee is inescapable, so keep withdrawals large.

Best cards for Australia travellers in Thailand

These cards offer zero or near-zero forex fees on AUD to THB conversions.

1

Wise Card

Forex fee: 0%

Review
2

Starling Bank Card

Forex fee: 0%

Review
3

Revolut Card

Forex fee: 0%

Review

How the savings add up on a Thailand trip

Spend scenarioStandard bank cardZero-forex cardSaving
Weekend trip (A$300 spend)β‰ˆA$9–10β‰ˆA$0–0.45β‰ˆA$9
1-week holiday (A$800 spend)β‰ˆA$22–28β‰ˆA$0–1.20β‰ˆA$22
2-week trip (A$1,500 spend)β‰ˆA$41–52β‰ˆA$0–2.25β‰ˆA$41
Long trip (A$3,000 spend)β‰ˆA$82–105β‰ˆA$0–4.50β‰ˆA$82

Estimates based on standard bank foreign transaction fee of β‰ˆ2.75–3.5%. Actual savings depend on your bank and card.

Thailand money tips for Australia travellers

Always decline DCC β€” when the ATM asks 'Do you want to be charged in GBP/USD?', say NO. Pay in THB.

Withdraw large amounts to amortise the 220 THB flat fee β€” one 10,000 THB withdrawal is cheaper than five 2,000 THB ones.

AEON ATMs (yellow, found in malls) sometimes charge 150 THB instead of 220 THB.

Wise gives you up to Β£200/month free ATM withdrawals β€” front-load this at trip start.

Airport exchange booths at Suvarnabhumi give poor rates. Wait until you're in the city or use a proper ATM.

Frequently asked questions

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