Do I need pesos?

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

Someone else can comment but I think you want to stay away from the standalone ATMs - use the ones at a bank or in the two grocery stores, Mega and Chedraui.
Just to clarify as I misread your statement at first: Never use the free standing ATMs that are not part of a bank. Only use bank ATMs or those at Mega and Chedraui.

Last summer there was a problem even with those asking you to accept a poor conversion rate. I don't know if that was abandoned or not. See this thread: More photos of the bank ATM scam

Or use 20:1 and give them 300 pesos (which is what I've been doing the past few years, even though the "official" exchange rate is around 19:1)

So thinking of tips in dollars, but then giving the tips in pesos means the person on the receiving end gets just a little more using 20:1. Which is fine with me.
Yep, I use 20:1 in my head on smaller charges, current google conversion on larger expenses. Except it's rare that I actually need to. As long as I have Pesos in my pocket, then I'm covered, and it's rare that I really need to know how much dinner costs in USD.

Something I've found over multiple trips to Mexico is that I don't spend my coins. They are effusive. I have no idea which is which and I usually just leave them unspent on my dresser. I have, in the past, ended up with at least 10 to 20 $ by the time I leave.

I find this is a good opportunity for a little charity so I leave it in the church's donation box.

They'd probably take dollars, too.
That's a nice practice. I used to have a friend at the local Red Cross there who would go to the airport and aggressively ask for such donations as people boarded planes, but she's changed jobs and I never see donation boxes. It's really not that difficult to spend coins on tacos tho. The tacos stands always need coins.
 
Paying in dollars will almost always cost you more than you would pay with pesos as the taxis or businesses enjoy a better exchange rate. Only exception I know is the MEGA supermarket. If you are not going to be out much (real shame as you may miss the best part of Cozumel) break a $20 at one of the banks.

Sorry you will be in an AI prison.


Dave Dillehay

HAHAHA.

I travel and dive extensively in the Yucatan and always carry Pesos. First off, I'm not a yank and therefore don't carry US money; but more importantly, believe it's more gracious to speak Spanish and use the local currency, which is what prices are posted in (for the most part). However, all that aside, experience tells me that flashing American dollar bills (or Euros or Canadian dollars) will more commonly result in a poorer exchange rate. I have witnessed several "transactions" where a local store or service provider has made a sweet deal at the expense of tourists NOT using pesos. Speaking of which, you will normally get the best rate at your home bank, second-best at an ATM in a chartered bank (HSBC, Scotiabank, Santander, Bank of Mexico etal).
 
I have witnessed several "transactions" where a local store or service provider has made a sweet deal at the expense of tourists NOT using pesos.

This attitude has always puzzled me. I wonder if the people who resent not getting a "best bank rate of exchange" from a Mexican business would also expect a Mexican to be equally miffed if a business in Canada, the US, or Europe refused to give him the "best bank rate of exchange" for his pesos?

The idea that "Mexicans prefer dollars" is ethnocentric and incorrect. For the average Mexican businessman (I mean one who does not need to pay his suppliers in dollars) accepting dollars just adds another step in his accounting, tax reporting, and banking. Even if he is not the type who reports his income, he still needs to convert them to pesos himself. The small difference in the exchange rate he offers and the one the big banks offer is what he effectively "charges" for this inconvenience.

Mexican businesses (as well as Mexican individuals) are limited by law on how many dollars they can deposit into their bank account per month. For some tourist oriented businesses, this can be a real headache. And, it is getting worse, as more and more of the anti-money-laundering laws are put in force.
 
FWIW, when I get to Cozumel I get pesos from a bank owned ATM and make most of my transactions in pesos. I try to think in pesos rather than in dollars while I am there. I know the fare for most of my cab rides and I just pay it without asking and I work from the pesos side of restaurant menus. I prepay for my hotel room in dollars but I pay most of my dive bill in pesos and put the remainder on a credit card so I don't end up with pesos left over.
 
I have never understood the fear expressed in these threads of not getting the best exchange rate. It’s not a lot of money. I waste or lose more than that difference every week at home through one misfortune or poor decision or another

Exactly my thoughts on the matter. I thought maybe I was going crazy, and I'm glad at least one person agrees :).

If a Mexican business wants to charge me slightly more for the convenience of taking my foreign currency I am fine with that. It's worth the convenience. I think of it rather like when domestic businesses used to charge extra for the use of credit/debit cards back when cash was still a thing in the US.
 
Doppler: You've reversed the order. I get a far far better rate withdrawing pesos in Mexico using DandyDon's guide to not getting stiffed at the ATM (thank you!!!).

I managed to pay 1% in fees using a cash advance on my no-forex credit card. The banks up here want 5%. The trick to the cash advance on the credit card is to make sure you have a negative balance on the credit card and withdraw the cash asap once on island. Once you owe $ on the card (positive balance) it's like 19.99%?
 
Exactly my thoughts on the matter. I thought maybe I was going crazy, and I'm glad at least one person agrees :).

Yeah, recently I was sitting in one of those airport restaurants in CUN and contemplating the irony in the fact that I just drank two 8 USD beers--the same beers I had been paying 40 pesos for all week in town--but have at times fretted over a few dollars "lost" to a poor exchange rate on a week's worth of spending money. It's my vacation--"Chill," I tell myself.
 
Yeah, recently I was sitting in one of those airport restaurants in CUN and contemplating the irony in the fact that I just drank two 8 USD beers--the same beers I had been paying 40 pesos for all week in town--but have at times fretted over a few dollars "lost" to a poor exchange rate on a week's worth of spending money. It's my vacation--"Chill," I tell myself.

You're not wrong but there are those that do not succumb to $8 airport beers. And not fretting over a few dollars lost to exchange rate would not have saved you that $16 but added to it. Being thrifty or not is a mindset and usually not confined to one thing. Once you start justifying bad economics those "few bucks" can quickly add up. There are those that don't care whether their Coz trip cost $1500 rather than $1000 but I view it as being able to take 3 Coz trips instead of 2.
 
I ALWAYS get pesos before going down. Some places have two menus, one in pesos and one in usd. Last month we had a group of 8 and got a check in usd, even though I asked and ordered off the pesos menu- we saved $80 by asking them to redo the bill in Pesos!!!! I also feel paying for taxis in pesos is a better value. Restaurant was Dos Toros on Melgar, the one upstairs :wink:
 

Back
Top Bottom