Wise just hiked its ATM withdrawal fees โ again. A thread on r/digitalnomad blew up in February 2026 when users noticed a new 2.69% fee kicking in above their monthly free limit. Reddit's verdict: it's still useful for transfers, but as your everyday card abroad, there are now better options.
Wise's ATM fee structure has shifted. On most plans, you get a free monthly ATM allowance (varies by country โ typically $200โ$250 equivalent). Beyond that, a 2.69% fee per withdrawal now applies, with no fixed cap. In Thailand, where local ATMs already charge a 250 baht (~$7) flat fee, that's a painful double hit. In high-cash countries, Wise is simply no longer cheap.
"My message says I can withdraw $239 USD for free and anything above that will have a 2.69% fee with no fixed fee. Wise own FX is worse than Mastercard/Visa rate. Almost every bank that doesn't charge a fee on foreign transactions will be better than Wise."
Wise's core advantage โ the mid-market exchange rate for currency transfers โ is still real and still the cheapest option in most corridors. But the free-ATM-abroad story is fading.
โ ๏ธ Weekend trap: Wise locks the exchange rate on weekends. If you do a currency conversion Saturday night, you're paying a rate that may be 0.3โ0.5% worse than Friday's close. Most users don't notice โ until they do the math.
Revolut now issues a German IBAN for new European customers, which fixes one of the biggest complaints about neo-banks abroad (getting rejected by employers and landlords). Premium plan at โฌ7.99/month gets you โฌ400/month free ATM withdrawals, multi-currency FX at interbank rates on weekdays, and travel insurance.
The catch: Revolut has no phone support, only in-app chat. If your account gets flagged during a fraud check while you're abroad, you're waiting. Multiple Reddit threads report slow resolution. Don't make Revolut your only account.
Also: Revolut charges a 1% weekend FX fee on all plans including the free tier. Easy to miss if you're doing Sunday transfers.
N26 is a licensed German bank. Free plan, German IBAN, no Anmeldung (address registration) required to open. The free Standard account gives you 3 free ATM withdrawals per month in euros; beyond that it's โฌ2/withdrawal.
It integrates Wise directly for international transfers โ so you can get Wise's FX rates without needing Wise as your daily card. Solid English support by chat, 7amโ11pm daily. The major gap: no Girocard, which means some German bakeries, pharmacies, and small shops won't accept it. Keep some cash.
If you're a US citizen living abroad, Schwab's brokerage checking account reimburses 100% of international ATM fees worldwide, no limits, no monthly fee. The catch is you need a US address to open it, so set it up before you leave.
"Don't make Schwab or Fidelity no-ATM-fees your primary banking solution while living overseas. Use it when you need it, but don't rely on it. The real risk is your account getting closed if they decide you're too 'foreign' for comfort."
Real talk from the thread: use Schwab as a backup ATM card, not your primary. Brokerage accounts have been closed on expats before with very little warning.
Wise isn't dead โ it's just been repriced. For sending money between countries, it's still the gold standard: fees starting at 0.41% of the transfer amount, full mid-market rate visibility before you confirm, 40+ currencies in one account. The Belgian IBAN (BE...) can cause friction with German employers and landlords, but for international payments it's the cheapest option of the four.
๐ Compare transfer fees for your corridor in real time
Open Fee CalculatorAfter reading through dozens of threads, the consensus strategy in 2026 looks like this:
๐ก The golden rule from r/expats: never rely on a single account abroad. Have at least two cards on different networks. Accounts get blocked, cards get eaten by foreign ATMs, apps go down. Redundancy isn't paranoia โ it's just how expat banking works.
| Service | ATM Free Limit | ATM Fee After | FX Transfer Fee | Weekend FX | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wise | ~$200โ250/mo | 2.69% + $0.50 | From 0.41% | Rate locked (worse) | Free |
| Revolut Free | โฌ200/mo or 5x | 2% (min โฌ1) | Competitive | +1% fee | Free |
| Revolut Premium | โฌ400/mo | 2% (min โฌ1) | Competitive | +1% fee | โฌ7.99 |
| N26 Free | 3 withdrawals/mo | โฌ2/withdrawal | Via Wise (0.41%+) | Normal rate | Free |
| Schwab (US) | Unlimited | 100% reimbursed | N/A | Normal rate | Free |
The worst time to open a backup bank account is when your main one is frozen. Wise, Revolut, and N26 all have documented cases of accounts going into review during fraud checks โ sometimes for days. If that's your only card abroad, you're stuck.
Spend 20 minutes now setting up a second account on a different network. Revolut on Mastercard + N26 on Mastercard is fine for Europe, but ideally you want one Visa and one Mastercard โ different networks have different acceptance issues by country.
"Don't keep cash and cards together, and don't rely on just one bank account. Have a local account and local apps on your phone. Multiple cards, multiple networks. This saved me twice."
Wise is still worth keeping โ for transfers, not ATMs. For daily banking abroad in 2026, Revolut Premium or N26 are the better cards to have in your wallet. Set up the combo before you travel and you'll never be caught short.
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