Welcome to Thailandblog.nl
With 275.000 visits per month, Thailandblog is the largest Thailand community in the Netherlands and Belgium.
Sign up for our free e-mail newsletter and stay informed!
Newsletter
Language setting
Rate Thai Baht
Sponsor
Latest comments
- Johnny B.G: Were you there during the impregnation? I was once accused of this and had a DNA test done outside TH (due to DNA privacy of the
- Cornelis: Just transferred money again – 1000 euros – via remitly.com, as I have been doing for several years. Costs are 2,99 euros,
- Josh M: And all in all, Wise is still much cheaper than transferring by bank. When I was still working for Transferwise in 2016, I regularly did
- Josh M: Lieven this story was great again and reminded me of my first time in the Esaan..
- Johnny B.G: It is nothing new that clowns rule the country, but with the tens of thousands of legal rules at your disposal you can still
- Eric Kuypers: Johan, those amended EU rules have been in place for a few years and apply to all imports from outside the EU to an EU country. See https:/
- Johnny B.G: She did things she believed in so there's nothing wrong with that, but what did it ultimately achieve? I find it very shocking
- Tino Kuis: A very sad story. Bung was a brave, articulate and smart woman who stood up for more freedom and justice
- Tino Kuis: The chemicals, such as silver iodide, used in 'cloud seeding' to initiate rainfall are not
- Lieven Cattail: Thank you Joseph, for this lesson in Thai history. Normally I would have walked right past this establishment, and it
- Rudolf: Spraying chemicals into the air doesn't sound like a good idea, depending of course on what you want to spray into the air, because g
- chose: today again plane trips in Udon Thani to make rain. so far with little success. facebook: udonthani update
- pw: ... and what rain falls in Thailand does not fall in neighboring countries. Typical Thai 'solution'.
- Cornelis: 'Thailand is doing everything it can to combat air pollution and protect the health of its residents.' I prob
- Jack S: The photo used here is completely wrong. The earth is still much too big (or the sun too small) and the distance to the sun is
Sponsor
Bangkok again
Menu
DOSSIERS
Learning objectives and topics
- Background
- Activities
- Advertorial
- Diary
- Tax question
- Belgium question
- Sights
- Bizarre
- Buddhism
- Book reviews
- Column
- Corona crisis
- The Culture
- Diary
- Dating
- The week of
- Dossier
- To dive
- Economy
- A day in the life of…..
- Islands
- Food and drink
- Events and festivals
- Balloon Festival
- Bo Sang Umbrella Festival
- Buffalo races
- Chiang Mai Flower Festival
- Chinese New Year
- Full Moon Party
- Christmas
- Lotus Festival – Rub Bua
- Loy Krathong
- Naga Fireball Festival
- New Years Eve celebration
- Phi ta khon
- Phuket Vegetarian Festival
- Rocket festival – Bun Bang Fai
- Songkran – Thai New Year
- Fireworks Festival Pattaya
- Expats and retirees
- state pension
- Car insurance
- Banking
- Tax in the Netherlands
- Thailand tax
- Belgian Embassy
- Belgian tax authorities
- Proof of life
- DigiD
- emigrate
- To rent a house
- Buy a house
- In memoriam
- Income statement
- King's day
- Cost of living
- Dutch embassy
- Dutch government
- Dutch Association
- News
- Passing away
- Passport
- Retirement
- Drivers license
- Distributions
- Elections
- Insurance in general
- Visa
- work
- Hospital
- Health insurance
- Flora and fauna
- Photo of the week
- Gadgets
- Money and finance
- History
- Health
- Charities
- Hotels
- Looking at houses
- Isaan
- Khan Peter
- Koh Mook
- King Bhumibol
- Living in Thailand
- Reader Submission
- Reader call
- Reader tips
- Reader question
- Society
- marketplace
- Medical tourism
- Environment
- Nightlife
- News from the Netherlands and Belgium
- News from Thailand
- Entrepreneurs and companies
- Education
- Research
- Discover Thailand
- Opinions
- Remarkable
- Calls
- Floods 2011
- Floods 2012
- Floods 2013
- Floods 2014
- Winter prices
- Politics
- Poll
- Travel stories
- Travel
- Organizations
- Shopping
- Social media
- Spa & wellness
- Sport
- Cities
- Position of the week
- The beach
- Language
- For sale
- TEV procedure
- Thailand in general
- Thailand with children
- thai tips
- Thai massage
- Tourism
- Going out
- Currency – Thai Baht
- From the editors
- Real estate law; and
- Traffic and transport
- Visa Short Stay
- Long stay visa
- Visa question
- Flight tickets
- Question of the week
- Weather and climate
Sponsor
Disclaimer translations
Thailandblog uses machine translations in multiple languages. Use of translated information is at your own risk. We are not responsible for errors in translations.
Read our full here disclaimer.
Royalty
© Copyright Thailandblog 2024. All rights reserved. Unless stated otherwise, all rights to information (text, image, sound, video, etc.) that you find on this site rest with Thailandblog.nl and its authors (bloggers).
Whole or partial takeover, placement on other sites, reproduction in any other way and/or commercial use of this information is not permitted, unless express written permission has been granted by Thailandblog.
Linking and referring to the pages on this website is permitted.
Home » Reader question » Reader question: Can I use a debit card from SNS bank with VPay in Thailand?
Dear readers,
Just got a new debit card from SNS bank. However, the Maestro logo is no longer on it, but Vpay (appears to be Visa). Does this affect the ATM in Thailand? Or can you also withdraw money everywhere? What are the experiences of others?
Have (exhaustively long) gone through the SNS Bank community regarding VPay. Also complaints about the use of the card in Thailand, ranging from swallowing the card to searching for an ATM that accepts VPay. The bank states that this is incidental, but you will only be in a Thai village with 1 ATM that does not accept VPay.
Then the bank is probably unable to help you further!
PS we leave in January and stay in Thailand for 2 months.
Regards,
Berto
According to the SNS website, yes. On the visa atm locator (google) you can see exactly at which machines in your area you can use the card.
Have experienced the same. Called SNS customer service. Within a few days I had my second new pass, this time with Maistro.
Success assured
That is indeed the best method. SNS completely randomly links one half of the new cards to Maestro and the other half to V PAY 'because they like to divide it 50/50 AND ASSUME THAT THE CARDS HAVE THE SAME FUNCTIONALITY'…. “Moreover, we assume that there is no difference between V PAY and Maestro.”
See the SNS forum, what a sadness….
https://forum.snsbank.nl/dagelijkse-bankzaken-109/waarom-mag-je-als-klant-niet-kiezen-tussen-v-pay-en-maestro-7418
Completely blown away of course, Wikipedia makes mincemeat of this nonsense:
“V Pay is a Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) debit card for use in Europe, issued by Visa Europe.[1] It uses the EMV chip and PIN system and may be co-branded with various national debit card schemes such as the German Girocard or Italy's PagoBancomat.
The V Pay card system competes with MasterCard's Maestro debit card product. However, unlike Maestro, V Pay cards cannot be used in non-chip and non-PIN environments, limiting its acceptance to those countries and merchants that use this system. Also unlike Maestro, which is issued and accepted globally, V Pay is designed as a specifically European product, and is not issued or accepted outside European countries.”
If you ask the SNS whether you can use it to pay/debit card internationally or abroad, the bank staff will assure you that this is possible. If you then call from Thailand that the card does not work, they say: With international / abroad we mean Europe.
Quick exchange for the Meastro variant!
Think for yourself, to begin with.
Every bank there are in Th about 12/13, has relationships with either MC=Mastercard, or US=Visa, or both. then there is also JTB=Japan and UnionPay=China, which you have nothing to do with here in NL/BE.
Once you realize which bank/s swallows/accepts your card, you are already many steps further.
By the way, the SNS should have been able to explain/tell you that way.
Vpay is simply a variant of VISA, which is most widespread in TH. Actually works like the Nl PIN or Belse Mr.Cash-direct payment with PIN and no credit. But that depends on the receiving bank.
take cash with you and change much cheaper than debit cards
Ed is not always right what you say.
How to bring money. Make purchases with visa and all purchases are insured for 30 days.
Never take the rate in Thailand but always pay in baths. And not in euros. Today 39.25 baht per euro via visa. Exchange offices 38.3 to 38.7 bath.
I withdraw an average of 1 bath in Thailand once a month. The rest with visas.
Interesting. Today's high so far is 39.04. So they give more Bahts for a Euro than the middle rate. Now a bank that gives more Euros for the Bahts than the middle rate, and tonight we are millionaires.
V PAY is a European debit card from Visa Europe.
Your bank may also allow you to use the card for internet banking or outside Europe. Check with your bank if these options are available. According to the VISA site itself.
.
Your bank may also allow you to use V PAY on the internet or to access money outside of Europe – just check with them to see if these options are available.
https://www.visa.co.uk/products/v-pay-by-visa/making-payments/