Wayfare is an independent education site, not the official page of any bank, card issuer or exchange · We don't take payments, act on your behalf, or promise returns · Learn first, then verify on the official page yourself
Money for travelers abroad · independent education site

A few days abroad,
and your money quietly springs a leak

Spend the same amount, and one traveler loses tens or hundreds to spreads, fees and DCC pop-ups,
while another pays almost the mid-market rate. The difference isn't luck. It's what you understood before you left.

Next step · decide after you understand

Thinking of using stablecoins (USDT) as one extra path for spending abroad? Understand the costs and risks first, then verify your account, fees and regional availability on the exchange's official page, and decide for yourself. We don't take payments or act on your behalf.

See the scale first

Same $1,000 abroad,
one traveler loses $6, another loses $100

Most of what you overpay abroad isn't on the price tag: the exchange spread, the currency-conversion fee, and that "pay in your home currency?" DCC pop-up at the till. The table below splits one $1,000 trip across four paths and shows what each one quietly skims.

Spend $1,000 abroad: what does each path cost?

Real cost · illustrative
Payment methodThe fee you seeReal extra / $1,000*Where it goes
Airport / bank cash exchange"No commission"≈ $80–120Hidden in the buy/sell spread
Home bank card, tap and go~1.5% conversion fee≈ $30–70Conversion fee, then DCC on top
Multi-currency travel card0–0.5% (over the cap)≈ $5–15Near mid-market, billed in local currency
Stablecoin card / USDTbridge pathSee each service's live page≈ $5–20Can lock the rate, but you buy USDT first and pay per-step fees
* Figures are illustrative, only to show the order of magnitude, not a quote or promise; actual rates follow each bank / issuer / service's live official page. Same person, same purchase, and the gap between the priciest and the cheapest path is a decent meal's worth, all in which path you pick. Whether the stablecoin path fits you is covered in this piece.

Pick what you need by your stage of the trip

This site doesn't pile up sections. It sorts everything by the real order of a trip, so whatever stage you're at, start with that stack.

01 / before you go

Cash or card? Which card to get?

Settling "what to carry, what to set up, when to exchange" before you leave saves more than fixing it on arrival.

02 / on the ground

The card pop-up and ATM traps

The few taps that actually cost you happen in the seconds you're standing at the till or the cash machine.

03 / after you're back

Leftover cash, mismatched bills

Getting home isn't the end: the loose change and those few odd charges are worth not throwing away.

What this site helps you understand

Eleven pieces in all, ordered by the real flow of spending abroad. Just read top to bottom.

Once you've seen the four paths, then decide on stablecoins

By now you've seen where cash, bank cards, travel cards and stablecoins each save and sting. If the stablecoin path genuinely fits you, the next step is to verify your account, the fees and your region's availability on the exchange's official page, then decide whether to sign up. We don't take payments, register on your behalf, vouch for any platform, or ask you for any account details.