No risk of debt
you spend only what you have loaded.
A prepaid card with a £20 sign-up bonus
T&C
A travel money card is a type of prepaid card designed for spending abroad. You load it with money first and then spend in shops, online and at cash machines. It looks like a normal debit or credit card, but you are only spending your own balance. You are not borrowing and you cannot go overdrawn.
you spend only what you have loaded.
approval is usually possible once ID and address are verified.
pay almost anywhere Visa or Mastercard are accepted; 3-D Secure for online.
Only products we have already reviewed are included. Details vary by plan and region. Always check the current fee page before you apply.
Mid-market vs % markup; in-wallet vs out-of-wallet conversion
Multi-country trip? Prefer mid-market or wide currency support
UK vs abroad; free allowance and caps
Heavy cash use? Compare the post-cap fee structure
Free vs paid tiers and inclusions
Paid tiers may increase allowances and reduce other fees
FPS, debit card, salary, Post Office/PayPoint cash
Cash loads often cost more; FPS usually cheaper
Daily load/ATM/spend caps; KYC tiers
Higher verification unlocks higher limits for travel
Visa/Mastercard; 3-D Secure; merchant category rules
Some prepaid cards struggle with car-hire/hotel holds
Freeze, alerts, virtual/disposable cards, analytics
Vital for security and managing a trip budget
Insurance, lounge, fee-free allowances
Don’t overpay for perks you will not use
Who Should Choose a Travel Money Card?
Holidaymakers and frequent travellers
Prefer not to carry large amounts of cash.
– Want to lock in EUR/USD or hold several currencies.
– Need predictable ATM access abroad.
Families and group travel
– Add extra cardholders to share spending, with per-card limits.
– Use instant top-ups from the app while away.
New to the UK or no bank account
– Need a spend card without opening a full current account.
– Want wages or funds paid to a separate travel wallet.
Online bookings and subscriptions while abroad
– Keep your main bank card off higher-risk sites; use virtual or disposable cards where offered.
Using Your Card Abroad: Practical Tips
– Pay in the local currency at terminals and ATMs to avoid costly Dynamic Currency Conversion.
– Preload the main trip currency before you fly; consider a buffer for volatility.
– Check ATM allowances and bring a backup card for emergencies.
– Test a small purchase on arrival to confirm card and currency handling.
– Keep notifications on so you see every transaction in real time.