Home
Search this Site
New Stuff & Blog
ONLINE STORE
Chakra Lamps
India Travel Tips
About India
Easy Travel Profiler
Get Cheap Airfares
India 'Must See' List
India Pilgrimage
India Travel Videos
Travel Photo Tips
Hello Bollywood!
Shahrukh Khan
Bolly for Beginners
Hindi Movie Reviews
Watch Hindi Movies
Hindi Movie Rentals
Hindi Language
Hindi Numbers
Links to More Info
Articles
Free E-Zine
ITS Social Enterprise
Contact Me
FAQ
Share Your Story

[?] Subscribe To This Site

XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines

 

Travel Money Tips

Use these travel money tips to make sure you don’t get into trouble or attract any unexpected suspicion.

The currency in India is the Indian Rupee (INR). Prices are written Rs then the number, eg. Rs100 equals 100 rupees. They are specified Indian rupees because other countries, eg. Nepal, also use their own rupees.

Travel Money Tips #1: Black Market

Don’t do it! If you are staying in a ‘touristy’ area, you will probably be approached by people whispering ‘Change Money’ or ‘US Dollar’ or something similar. They are inviting you to change money on the black market. Don’t even think about it. It’s illegal and frankly, not worth the risk. In any case, you probably have an awesome exchange rate with India anyway (I really like multiplying my money rather than dividing it :-)

When travelling between countries, small plastic cases are very handy for keeping notes and coins of different currencies separate. You can just keep the ones you're not using in your bag.

Travel Money Tips #2: Banks

Banks can suck a lot of time, so the easiest way to get Indian Rupees is this: Convert your first lot at the airport money changer (don’t bother about trying for ATMs as they’re pretty rare or non-existent, even at the major airports). Now that ATMs are available fairly easily in most of the big cities, this is the easiest way to get more cash. If you have to, use a bank, but be prepared to wait a while. (The biggest thing that the English left behind when they left India was a deep and abiding passion for bureaucracy.)

Travel Money Tips #3: Receipts

Keep your receipts from ATMs and currency conversions, whether at the airport or at banks. Though you may not be called upon to show them, they prove that you sourced the currency through legal channels, rather than the black market, so it’s best to keep them.

Travel Money Tips #4: Travelers Checks vs Credit Cards

I used to use travelers checks when I first started going to India 20 years or so ago, but I don’t feel that they’re really needed anymore. I usually keep USD50-100 with my passport in a money belt, and take a few hundred to change at the airport. After that, I usually rely on ATMs. I would usually take at least 2 cards though, so you can keep them separately, in case of pickpockets. (I would have to say though, not to rely on the ATMs in Kathmandu, Nepal. When I was living there in 2002, there were only 3 ATMs in the city and they would regularly run out of notes—not good! I haven’t had it happen in India, though, and every time I go back there are more and more ATMs around.)

Travel Money Tips #5: Currency Declaration

I'm not sure why you would, but if you were to bring in more than USD 5,000 (or equivalent in foreign currency and travelers checks, you will need to fill out a Currency Declaration form. You are allowed to bring in as much as you wish, as long as you declare it. I would certainly not recommend bringing large amounts of cash, as you may a) find it too bulky to carry discreetly when converted to rupees and b) may find yourself parted from it by a masterful thief or scam artist. If you need to check for updates to the currency regulations, here is the official government statement.

To make sure you don’t get parted from your cash by a scam artist, check out our scam artist avoidance tips.

Back from Travel Money Tips to Travel Tips for India