The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Currency lottery gives Scots holiday hangover

-

A Sunday Post probe has found that High Street chains are offering widely differing exchange rates to customers with leftover holiday cash.

And, with the tumbling price of the pound following the Brexit vote leading to soaring costs for families heading to the European mainland for a break, some rates offered were described as “disgracefu­lly low.”

Our probe found customers could lose out on as much as £23 when converting 500 back to sterling depending on which shop they went to.

Consumer groups have urged people returning from abroad this autumn to shop around for the best deal.

We contacted several leading currency exchange services to find out what we would be offered for 500.

Our investigat­ion found the Post Office had the worst deal, offering £390.63.

Thomas Cook Travel offered £413.22 for the same amount.

Many Bureau de Change outlets were selling 500 at a cost of around £450-£460.

Emma Co u l t h u r s t , f rom holiday price comparison website Tr a v e l S u p e r m a r k e t , said: “Buy-back rates for changing your holiday cash into pounds are notoriousl­y poor.

“There can be a frustratin­g lack of transparen­cy when you try to compare what you’ll get back.

“Some companies even offer different rates depending on where you live in the country. Where there is a lot of currency exchange competitio­n in an area, it’s likely there will be better rates on offer and the reverse where there isn’t much competitio­n.”

We contacted branches of Debenhams, the Post Office and Thomas Cook in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Dundee.

Some of the rates even differed between postcodes.

While Debenhams and The Post Office offered the same rates n a t i o n w i d e, Thomas Cook’s varied in different places.

Branches in Aberdeen and Fife offered £ 393.21 for our euros, COLIN Grant, from Glasgow, went on holiday to Spain in the summer.

Before leaving, he’d purchased enough euros to see him and his family through the trip.

However, when he came back he still had 300 left over.

While shopping in Sainsbury’s last week he

Colin Grant. decided to pop into its Bureau de Change to convert the spare cash back to sterling.

However, he was so angered by the rate he was offered that he decided just to hold on to the cash.

Colin said: “What they were offering was far lower than I expected.

“The pound is so weak while one office in Dundee was willing to pay out £413.22.

We also contacted branches of Sainsbury’s, Asda and Tesco to see what deals we could get.

Our investigat­ion also looked at the return rate for dollars but did not find the same levels of disparity.

Helen Saxon, chief analyst at MoneySavin­gExpert. com, said: “Rates for selling back unused holiday currency are often disgracefu­lly low. The best way to avoid poor buy- back exchange rates is to try and estimate how much currency you’ll need for the trip, so you don’t have lots left over when you get home.”

A Post Office spokespers­on said it aimed to keep “rates as competitiv­e as possible so that we compare favourably with all our competitor­s”.

The other firms declined to comment. now you should be getting a better deal.

“There will be millions of people looking to sell their unused holiday money and some of the rates going are terrible.”

A spokespers­on from Sainsbury’s Travel Money said: “We offer competitiv­e rates on currency purchase and buy-backs.”

 ??  ?? ■
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom