Scottish Daily Mail

Holidaymak­ers get just 0.87 euros per £1 at the airport

- By Victoria Bischoff Money Mail Deputy Editor

HOLIDAYMAK­ERS buying their euros at the last minute are falling victim to ‘pantomime-villain’ airport bureaux offering just 87 cents to the pound.

Consumer experts attacked airport exchange services as the pound fell to an eight-year low yesterday.

On the currency markets it slumped 0.6 per cent to €1.083 – its lowest level since October 2009.

But at the airports the exchange rate plummeted further, with people getting the worst rates since the financial crisis.

At Southampto­n airport yesterday the walk-up rate offered by currency exchange service Moneycorp was just €0.872 to the £1. This means for every £1,000 of spending money, holidaymak­ers would get just €872. By contrast holidaymak­ers who purchase their travel money online in advance can get much closer to the official rate.

Tesco, for example, was yesterday offering €1.07 and free delivery for online orders of more than €500. Ian Strafford-Taylor, chief executive of travel money firm FairFX, said: ‘Holidaymak­ers getting away from it all to make the most of the last bank holiday of the year need to be wary of buying currency last-minute at the airport.’ And James Daley, director of consumer website Fairer Finance, said: ‘Airport bureaux are becoming the pantomime villains of the summer.

‘They have always offered bad rates but over the past couple of years the gap between the market rate and what we get seems to be getting wider and wider.

‘Holidaymak­ers need to get savvier and avoid the airport bureaux at all costs unless they have bought the currency ahead of time and are just picking it up. Buying in advance will get travellers a much better rate.’

Experts say the pound’s eightyear low against the euro is down to stronger-than-expected growth in the Eurozone economy during the first half of the year and worries about Brexit. The pound continued to fall throughout yesterday to €1.083 last night – down 0.6 per cent over the day and 0.75 per cent since Tuesday.

Figures show that in the past six months the pound has fallen 8.7 per cent against the euro. It is down 20.2 per cent compared to two years ago.

It comes ahead of a speech tomorrow by European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi at a key global gathering of policymake­rs in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. It is thought that whatever Mr Draghi says could impact the currency markets further, which could either spell further bad news for British holidaymak­ers or give them a boost depending on how his speech is received.

Adrian Lowcock, investment director of Architas, said that in the UK ‘the Brexit vote and snap UK General Election have weighed on the pound keeping it low… this is likely to continue whilst Brexit negotiatio­ns continue.’

Pauline Maguire, retail director at Moneycorp, said: ‘The reason for our higher airport rates is the significan­t cost associated with operating there – from ground rent and additional security, to the cost of staffing the bureaux for customers on early and late flights.’

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