Orange wrote:
WiseAsh wrote:
The head of the Central Bank predicted today that the exchange rate will be stable through 2016.
I was a little surprised by this, but he holds the cards.
If he's saying that, it means they will artificially keep propping up the Colon. But one day that bubble will burst.
So here's an observation that I just realized... when I was in Colombia in August, I paid my hotel (NOT the Mansion btw) bill by credit card. When I booked the hotel on hotels.com, it was about $70/night. A week before the trip, I canceled it and re-booked it for $53/night due to exchange rate going down. And by the time I got there, the exchange rate had gone up some more so that when they charged my card for the same amount as I was quoted on day 1 (448,000 COP), it turned out to be $144 for 3 nights, so about $48/night. They didn't jack up the price of the hotel just because the rate had changed.
In Costa Rica, most businesses that I have dealt with handle this differently. First, they usually still charge your credit card in local currently (colones). But instead of charging you the same rate in colones, they actually adjust the rate in colones based on the dollar exchange rate. If for example, the bill is $100 and the exchange rate was 500:1, they always convert it to colones first using the sell rate which is always higher, so they would charge your card about 52,000 colones. If the exchange rate goes up to 550 lets say, you should be getting a 10% discount. Not in CR. In CR, they will charge your card 570:1 for the $100, or 57,000 colones. So not only do they charge our cards in local currency incurring us a currency exchange fee, they jack up the price just because the exchange rate moved.
This is exactly what we were killing the Medellin Mansion for doing when they sent that ridiculous email a few months ago. I just realized that the businesses in CR do the same thing. The last time I rented a car in CR, it happened to me. The exchange rate moved from 500 to 520 and I ended up paying more just because they thought their the ones who should benefit from the exchange rate movement.
You are absolutely right Orange. Rental car agencies and most hotels have always done this in CR, the double conversion trick, in order to benefit from the buy/sell spread, not once but twice per transaction. The way it works is this:
They quote the price in US$, say $100
Then they charge your credit card in colones at the higher $buy rate, say $540
Then your credit card gets billed at the banks exchange rate. Plus any foreign transaction fees, if applicable.
The only way to avoid getting fleeced this way is to pay cash, in US$...and by the way, with the exact amount because of course they don't have change
Lately, the last couple of years, most hotels and some shops, most notably those at the airport or other tourist locations have started charging your international cc in US$, IF requested. Make sure you request to be charged in $....otherwise, the above applies.