And basically the whole eastern Europe. If you want to use the toilet, you needSurprisingly we needed cash in Vienna... Lots of 50c euro toilets.
Just go with the flow....- If you are a dude, let grandma watch you pee.
I think its just going from Prague (where this is not a thing) to Vienna (where this is the norm) caught me off guard given their distance and their status as better off countries/cities in the area.And basically the whole eastern Europe. If you want to use the toilet, you need
- 0,5 € or equivalent, try to have exact change.
- If you are a dude, let grandma watch you pee.
Compulsory requirements to use public toilet![]()
Plain green = copy of physical cardWe are off to Vietnam and now have Wise in my Apple wallet
In fact I see 2 “cards” and both say they are visa
One is plain green and the other is”multicolour green”
How useful are these in Vietnam (HCMC, Phu Quoc and Hanoi) ?
Are they accepted ?
Must I have a physical card ? - I do possess a physical plain green one
I think its just going from Prague (where this is not a thing) to Vienna (where this is the norm) caught me off guard given their distance and their status as better off countries/cities in the area.
I would expect it more east of Austria but oh well. Oh and you need it in Christmas markets.
You will definitely need some cash but a lot of the stalls do accept card - at least that it what is was like in 2023.Are the Christmas markets in Germany very cash based?
Yes.Are the Christmas markets in Germany very cash based?
Same in RéunionSurprisingly we needed cash in Vienna... Lots of 50c euro toilets.
When I was in Cambodia 2 years ago, there was one bank that worked fee free for me - Vattanac Bank.Cambodia seems to be generally CC friendly (at least in Phnom Phen and Siem Reap) but still many places are cash only. So have USD handy - preferably small denominations to pay the correct amount or you’ll get change in Real.
I believe ATMs have high fees, so bring cash.
Speaking of high ATM fees. We passed through Thailand and already knew about the extortionate fees there and still the need for cash. Turns out the old school money changers are actually quite decent value compared to going to an ATM.
The Yellow stall “TT” seemed to be the best and you could easily change AUD from as lows as A$5 up to A$100 notes and multiples there of.
