trnorman
SBH Insider
2 cheeseburgers and 2 fries were $37.14 according to my Citi statementA chezburger, no fries, is 26 euro at Select.
2 cheeseburgers and 2 fries were $37.14 according to my Citi statementA chezburger, no fries, is 26 euro at Select.
Are you being charged in Euros or Dollars? Always charge in Euros and let the bank handle the exchange, the exchange offered by the CC companies is not great.We have been on the island a couple of days. We always look at the exchange rate on the restaurant receipts. At some we are getting .90 for a dollar. but .80 USD at others like the burger palace. I am wondering if some places are adding 10 pct gratuity? Maybe we are getting ripped off lol. Cant tell.
Restaurants that accept payment in USD are doing so as a courtesy, and rarely keep track of current exchange rates. They may not change their exchange rate for weeks, months, or even longer. As noted above, if you are using a credit card it should always be charged in Euros. If you have a pocket full of USD cash that you want to spend you’ll get a better exchange rate at the Currency Exchange in Gustavia.We have been on the island a couple of days. We always look at the exchange rate on the restaurant receipts. At some we are getting .90 for a dollar. but .80 USD at others like the burger palace. I am wondering if some places are adding 10 pct gratuity? Maybe we are getting ripped off lol. Cant tell.
We paid with Credit Card. But it was the same Credit card. @Eddies it was 90 eu + 10 pct whichis about right. La Langousta was 120 eu .+ 20 pct.Are you being charged in Euros or Dollars? Always charge in Euros and let the bank handle the exchange, the exchange offered by the CC companies is not great.
Was a Visa from a credit unionWas the card an AmEx?
We were charged in euros and at the bottom of the receipt it says USDDid they charge you in dollars or Euros?
We were charged in euros and at the bottom of the receipt it says USD
Thank Kevin.Very clear explanation.Ah, that helps. I now understand where you’re coming from, and that can be confusing.
If you paid in Euros on your credit card then ignore the USD number. The USD number is only meaningful if you pay at the restaurant in USD, not if you’re paying in Euros on your credit card.
With a Euro charge the exchange rate is determined by your credit card, not the restaurant. It’s usually at a reasonably fair rate, plus whatever percentage your card may add for foreign charges (some add none, some add 3%). What you will end up paying is determined by your credit card provider. I would expect the actual amount that appears on your bill to be somewhere between $34 and $36. If it’s actually $38+ then you can do better, and that’s on your credit card, not the restaurant.
Whatever you pay, the restaurant gets €31, less whatever bite their credit card processor takes.
Thanks Kevin!Ah, that helps. I now understand where you’re coming from, and that can be confusing.
If you paid in Euros on your credit card then ignore the USD number. The USD number is only meaningful if you pay at the restaurant in USD, not if you’re paying in Euros on your credit card.
With a Euro charge the exchange rate is determined by your credit card, not the restaurant. It’s usually at a reasonably fair rate, plus whatever percentage your card may add for foreign charges (some add none, some add 3%). What you will end up paying is determined by your credit card provider. I would expect the actual amount that appears on your credit card bill to be somewhere between $34 and $36. If it’s actually $38+ then you can do better, and that’s on your credit card, not the restaurant.
Whatever you pay, the restaurant gets €31, less whatever bite their credit card processor takes.



