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Forex cards or credit cards? Which one is better for foreign travel

Forex cards work like debit or charge cards that you can load up before you travel abroad. Every swipe deducts the amount from your card. On the other hand, your credit card gives you reward points at every swipe.

June 30, 2023 / 15:50 IST
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While the differential TCS puts credit cards at an advantage, many forex cards offer a cheaper way to spend abroad.

Come October 1, and forex cards will attract 20 percent tax collected at source, or TCS on spends in excess of Rs 7 lakh a year. That is, you will have to shell out an extra 20 percent at the time of buying or loading your forex card on the amount in excess of the Rs 7 lakh TCS exemption threshold. Currently, purchase of foreign exchange (currency and forex cards) in excess of Rs 7 lakh a year attracts TCS at 5 percent. But there is no TCS if your spends are under the exemption limit.

International spends via credit cards when abroad, too were brought under the TCS net from May 16, 2023. However, the government later offered relief by allowing international spends of up to Rs 7 lakh per year via debit and credit cards to be exempted from TCS.  Now, the June 28 announcement by the Finance Ministry has put the TCS on such spends on hold for now.

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While credit cards are at an advantage to forex cards, as long as you do not cross the Rs 7 lakh per person per financial threshold for foreign remittances, even forex cards will attract no TCS.

You can adjust the TCS against your tax liability or claim refund for it at the time of filing your tax returns. Until then, this money remains blocked. The question is: should you carry a forex card when travelling or is a credit card good enough?