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What is the forex markup fee on Indian credit cards?

Mani Rao

Asked 10 Jun 2026

3

I travel abroad twice a year. Which Indian credit cards have the lowest foreign currency markup fee for international transactions?

5 Answers

22
Mokshita Yadav·18 May 2026

The 'minimum due' trap is real. Banks love it because they charge ~36-42% interest on the carried-forward amount. If you can't pay the full bill this month, pay at least 50% — anything below that and the interest eats the rewards of the next 6 months.

16
Nusrat Hegde·19 Feb 2026

On credit limit increase: most banks auto-review every 6 months. If you use 30-70% of the limit and pay in full, you'll get an automatic increase. Don't call and ask for it explicitly — banks take it as a sign of credit hunger and sometimes lower the limit instead.

14
Nirmala Vaidyan·28 Apr 2026

Tip from someone who made this mistake: never max out the credit limit in the first 6 months. Banks track utilisation, and high utilisation right after approval often triggers a credit limit decrease or even an account review.

13
Hari Mangar·14 Apr 2026

For the fee waiver condition: most banks count only retail purchases, not EMI, wallet loads, or fuel (in some cases). Read the TnC PDF linked at the bottom of the fee-waiver email — it's usually 2-3 paragraphs of fine print that change everything.

4
Junaid Gupta·7 Mar 2026

I've owned 4 cards over the last 7 years. The biggest lesson: a card that fits your spend pattern beats the 'most rewarding' card on paper. A 5% cashback card you actually use daily will give you 10x more value than a 10% card you use once a month.

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