Judit Foglszinger <fgr...@freenet.de> writes: >> I had a very bad experience when doing money transfer from Germany to >> Swiss for my Nomad Swiss knife: The banks have taken extra 25 Euro for >> the about 30 Euro knife.
Philipp Hug is more qualified to talk about this, but when I last talked to him about this the idea was to allow at least one option that makes it possible to pay by credit card (most probably through PayPal). > > When I ordered my knife, I got the following instructions: > >> Most banks are capable of performing so-called >> SEPA-transactions, which are not any more expensive than national >> transations. Please make sure to ask your bank. This is not true for transactions to Switzerland. We already discussed this at some length last autumn. SEPA is only the technology used and does not have anything to do with the fees charged. The confusion comes from the fact that *inside* the European Union banks are not allowed to charge more for international transactions than for national transactions and as national transactions are usually free of charge, most transactions inside the EU are free as well. But note that Switzerland while at the heart of Europe is *not* an European Union member state. Some banks don't charge for SEPA transactions to Switzerland, others do. How much the transaction costs depends on your bank. Gaudenz > > The trick is doing the transfer in euro, > regardless of the currency and using BIC/IBAN. > When asked about transfers in foreign currency, > banks tend to only mention the expensive option. > _______________________________________________ > Debconf-team mailing list > Debconf-team@lists.debconf.org > http://lists.debconf.org/mailman/listinfo/debconf-team -- Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better. ~ Samuel Beckett ~ _______________________________________________ Debconf-team mailing list Debconf-team@lists.debconf.org http://lists.debconf.org/mailman/listinfo/debconf-team