ATMs (
cajeros automáticos ) are
plentiful in Argentina. Very few towns or even
villages have no ATM at all, though you can
sometimes be caught out in very remote places,
especially in the Northwest, so never rely
completely on them. Most machines take all
credit cards or helpfully display those that can
be used: you can nearly always get money out
with Visa or Mastercard, or with any other cards
linked to the Plus or Cirrus systems. LINK
machines seem to cause a lot of foreigners
problems, so maybe avoid them. Machines are
mostly multilingual though some of them only use
castellano , so you might need to have a
phrase book or a Spanish-speaker handy. You may
be offered a choice of pesos or dollars but
whichever you withdraw try to avoid getting
lumbered with only $100 notes by deliberately
taking out odd figures such as $90 or $140.
Trying to buy a drink, cigarettes or a postcard
with a crisp $100 can be a frustrating ordeal
and won't make you many friends.
Unfortunately travellers' cheques are
not really a viable option. Fewer and fewer
banks seem to accept them, none at all in some
areas, and when they do they charge exorbitant
commission and take ages to fill out all the
paperwork. If you do insist on taking a stock of
travellers' cheques (as a precaution in case
your credit card goes astray) make sure they're
in US dollars and are one of the main brands
such as American Express - their own, not those
issued by a bank with the Amex logo - and that
your signature is 100 percent identical to that
in your passport, down to the colour of the ink.
Be scrupulously careful when countersigning the
cheques, and you will be watched like a hawk as
you do so. Travellers' cheques can't be used
like cash nor can they be changed in many banks
- casas de cambio end to be a better bet.
Their opening hours vary from region to region
but on the whole they are open from 9am to 6pm,
perhaps closing for lunch or siesta. A few are
open on Saturday mornings but Sunday opening is
virtually non-existent. Tourist offices should
be able to tell you where you can change
travellers' cheques, but be prepared for blank
looks. Banks may also be able to give you a
cash advance n your credit card, though
again this may be expensive.
Another way of getting emergency cash is to
have money wired to you. This is a speedy
but terribly costly option and only to be
resorted to when absolutely necessary. Western
Union operates through all post offices in
Argentina.