Currently in Egypt and they just asked us to pay in USD cash for an added activity but, not being American, we don’t have USD. We have the local currency and the ability to get that out at ATMs, but no way to access foreign currency. So annoying but they accepted local in the end.

  • @EndOfLine
    link
    English
    61 year ago

    How does this scam work? Is it based on the assumption that tourist won’t know the exchange rate and can be easily (and presumably grossly) overcharged?

    • @simple
      link
      English
      9
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Yeah, and it happens all the time. Gift shops and local shops will often charge more to outsiders because a lot of tourists don’t realize how much cheaper everything is supposed to be here. Like they’d sell you a water bottle for $1 when its real price is well below 40 cents when calculating the local currency. This isn’t even adding the fact that the USD is worth more than its official price here because the Egyptian Pound is constantly crashing.

      Someone in the comments said that asking for foreign currencies is common, but it absolutely isn’t. Everyone trades with EGP and if they tell you otherwise, then they’re jacking up the price so much because you look like a clueless tourist.

      As for how many people fall for this, I’d say… A lot.