Spain takes cards almost everywhere now, but youโll still want some Euro for markets, small bars, and tips. The catch is the airport and tourist-square ATMs that quietly skim 12% or more off every withdrawal. Hereโs how to get cash at the real rate.
| What | Details |
|---|---|
| Can a Singapore card withdraw Euro? | Yes, any Visa or Mastercard works at virtually every Spanish ATM, usually with an English menu |
| Which to avoid | Euronet and other private ATMs: a per-withdrawal surcharge plus a DCC markup of up to ~12% |
| Big-bank foreign-card fee | CaixaBank, BBVA, Santander typically add ~3โ7 EUR (~S$4โ10) per withdrawal |
| Lower or no fee | Deutsche Bank, Unicaja, EVO Banco, Abanca often charge foreign cards little to nothing |
| The DCC trap | Always choose Euro, never SGD, when the screen asks |
| Cheapest way | YouTrip: first S$400/month overseas ATM withdrawals free, 2% after, 0% FX, lock EUR in-app |
Yes. Any Visa or Mastercard from a Singapore bank or travel card works at virtually every ATM in Spain, and most machines offer an English menu. Acceptance was never the issue here; the fee stack on a regular bank card is.
Pay with a standard Singapore debit or credit card and youโre usually looking at:
None of that shows up as a line item, which is exactly why itโs easy to miss. A multi-currency travel card strips most of it out, and weโll get to the maths further down.
A Spanish ATM withdrawal can carry up to three charges, and theyโre easy to confuse. Sort them out, and youโll pull cash at close to the real exchange rate.
| Cost type | Typical amount |
|---|---|
| Bank-branded ATM operator fee (foreign card) | 0 EUR at some banks, ~3โ7 EUR (~S$4โ10) at big banks |
| Private ATM (Euronet and similar) | 1.95โ4.99 EUR (~S$3โ7) per withdrawal, plus DCC |
| Your home bankโs overseas ATM fee | Flat fee or ~1โ3% (varies by card) |
| DCC markup if you pick SGD | Up to ~12% on the rate |
ATM fees are subject to change; verify on screen before withdrawal.
When a Spanish ATM offers to charge you in Singapore dollars instead of Euro, decline it every time. That offer is dynamic currency conversion (DCC), where the machine converts the amount at its own rate instead of your card networkโs. That markup can reach up to around 12% or more, which is more than the whole rest of the fee stack combined.
The fix takes one tap: when the screen shows โwith conversionโ (SGD) or โwithout conversionโ (EUR), pick euro / without conversion. Your own card then does the conversion at the Mastercard or Visa wholesale rate (the same rate banks use between themselves), which is almost always better.
The good news: since EU rules under Regulation 2021/1230, ATMs in Spain must show the conversion markup on screen as a percentage over the European Central Bank reference rate before you confirm. If a fat percentage flashes up, thatโs your cue to back out and pick Euro. The same rule applies to card machines in shops and restaurants: asked โEUR or SGD?โ, the answer is always EUR.
Stick to ATMs attached to a real bank, and steer clear of the standalone private machines in airports and tourist squares. The difference can be 80 EUR (~S$120) on a single tripโs worth of cash.
Bank fee policies for foreign cards shift, and sources disagree on which bank charges what, so let the on-screen disclosure be your final check every time. If a commission warning appears and you donโt like the number, press cancel and walk to the next machine.
Hereโs how to withdraw EUR with YouTrip in 4 easy steps:
If the machine offers conversion to SGD, choose without conversion (EUR), then take your cash and card.
Resets on the 1st of each month.
Thereโs no single nationwide cap. The per-transaction limit is set by a mix of the ATMโs own ceiling and your home bank, and the one that bites first is usually your card.
| Limit | Amount |
|---|---|
| Spanish ATM per-transaction maximum | Often 300โ600 EUR (~S$450โ895); some machines allow up to 1,000 EUR (~S$1,490) or more |
| Your home bankโs daily cap | Varies; check before you fly |
| Your travel cardโs ATM limit | Adjustable in-app for most cards |
Unicaja, for example, has been reported allowing up to 500 EUR (~S$745) fee-free for foreign cards. If youโve set a low daily ATM limit on your YouTrip or bank card, raise it in the app before you travel so a bigger withdrawal doesnโt get declined. Pulling out one larger amount also beats several small ones if any flat fee is involved.
Less than youโd think. Spain is genuinely card-friendly โ most cafรฉs, shops, taxis and restaurants take contactless, so cash is really for markets, small family-run bars, tips and the odd rural spot.
For a week or so, many travellers find 200โ300 EUR (~S$300โ450) covers all the cash-only moments with room to spare. Take out enough to cut down the number of withdrawals, but donโt over-stock and end up flying home with leftover Euro. Because each withdrawal can carry an operator fee, fewer larger pulls usually beat lots of small ones.
Withdraw on arrival, from a Spanish bank ATM, with a card that doesnโt charge FX. That beats changing cash in Singapore.
A money changer in Singapore doesnโt show you a โfeeโ; it bakes a markup into the rate it quotes, and that spread is wider at airport counters. Pulling Euro from a Spanish bank ATM with a multi-currency card gets you the wholesale rate instead, plus your free monthly allowance.
If you want a small float in hand before you fly, keep it small (enough for your first taxi or coffee) and withdraw the rest in Spain. Donโt load up on Euro at a Changi counter for the whole trip.
Pair card spending with the occasional free ATM pull, and carry a multi-currency card built for it. For Singapore travellers, thatโs where YouTrip earns its place in Spain.
Euro is one of YouTripโs holdable wallet currencies, so you can lock in your Euro in the app when the rate looks good and spend them later with no surprises. Every tap and contactless payment runs at the Mastercard wholesale rate with 0% foreign transaction fee, versus the 2.5โ3.5% a regular credit card quietly adds overseas.
For the cash you do need, YouTripโs first S$400 of overseas ATM withdrawals each calendar month is free, then a flat 2% after that. Use it for a withdrawal or two at a no-fee bank ATM and tap for everything else.
Hereโs how that plays out on a real trip. Say you need 600 EUR (~S$895) in cash across a 10-day trip:
Same cash, around S$110 difference.
A multi-currency card lets you spend like a local, without the markups or hidden charges traditional banks typically apply. Some waive FX fees entirely, which is exactly what you want for a euro-zone trip.
For Singapore travellers, YouTrip is the obvious fit for the travel-spend and overseas-ATM job: Euro held in-app, the wholesale rate on every tap, and a free monthly ATM allowance. Hereโs how the main Singapore options compare:
| YouTrip | Revolut | Wise | Amaze | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EUR Exchange Rate | 1 SGD = โ EUR | 1 SGD = โ EUR | 1 SGD = โ EUR | 1 SGD = โ EUR |
| FX Fees | No fees | Weekdays: no fees within your planโs fair-usage limit. Weekends: 1% fee regardless of plan | Currency conversion fee from 0.26% (varies by currency) | No FX fees; 1% domestic fee on SGD transactions |
| ATM Withdrawal Fees | Up to S$400 free/month; 2% fee thereafter | Up to S$350 or 5 withdrawals free/month; 2% (or S$1.49, whichever is higher) thereafter | From 1 May 2026: free up to S$100/month; 1.75% fee thereafter | 2% fee on all amounts withdrawn |
Rates taken as of 15 June 2026
Related Guide: 7 Best Multi-Currency Cards in Singapore
Spain is safe for ATM use, but the basics still apply, especially around busy stations and tourist squares where private machines cluster.
It depends on the bank. Deutsche Bank, Unicaja, EVO Banco and Abanca are most often reported as fee-free for foreign cards, while the big networks (CaixaBank, BBVA, Santander) usually add around 3โ7 EUR (~S$4โ10). Private machines like Euronet are the priciest. Policies change, so check the on-screen fee before you confirm.
You trigger dynamic currency conversion (DCC), where the machine converts at its own rate instead of your card networkโs. That markup can reach 12% or more, far more than any other fee on the withdrawal. Always choose Euro, or โwithout conversionโ, so your card handles the exchange at the wholesale rate.
Often 300โ600 EUR (~S$450โ895) per transaction, though some machines allow up to 1,000 EUR (~S$1,490) or more. The limit is set by a mix of your home bankโs cap and the ATMโs own ceiling. Unicaja, for example, has been reported allowing up to 500 EUR (~S$745) fee-free for foreign cards.
You can, but donโt unless you have to. ATM withdrawals on a credit card count as a cash advance, with a separate fee plus interest that starts the day you withdraw and no interest-free period. Use a debit or prepaid travel card instead.
Only a small float, if any. Changing Euro in Singapore means paying a marked-up rate, wider at airport counters. Itโs cheaper to withdraw on arrival from a Spanish bank ATM with a card that charges no FX, keeping just enough Euro in hand for your first taxi or coffee.
Strongly card. Contactless works across cities, transport and shops, so you can spend most of a Spain trip without cash. Keep 200โ300 EUR (~S$300โ450) on hand for markets, small bars, tips and rural spots.
Need fee-free or lower-fee ATM recommendations elsewhere? Explore our country-specific withdrawal guides:
Malaysia |
Japan |
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South Korea |
Taiwan |
Hong Kong |
Indonesia |
Vietnam |
Australia |
Macau |
China |
US |
South Africa |
Philippines |
France |
UK |
New Zealand |
Italy |
Cambodia |
Canada |
Switzerland |
Spain
For getting your Euro sorted before you fly, see our SGD to EUR rate guide and whether itโs cheaper to change money in Singapore or overseas.
Getting Euro in Spain isnโt hard. The only real skill is not overpaying for them. Pick a bank ATM over a Euronet, always choose Euro over your home currency, and let a no-FX-fee card do the converting.
Not a YouTrooper yet? Singaporeโs go-to multi-currency wallet helps you save with great FX rates and zero fees. Skip the money changer and get a free YouTrip card + S$5 YouTrip credits with code YTBLOG5.
Then, head over to our YouTrip Perks page for exclusive offers and promotions โ we promise you wonโt regret it. Join our Telegram (@YouTripSG) and Community Group (@YouTripSquad) for travel tips, event invites, and more!
Happy travels!
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