If you’re about to fly abroad and want to buy forex card before you pack, this guide walks you through the whole process the way a frequent traveller would. A forex card is a prepaid card you load with foreign currency at a locked exchange rate, then swipe or withdraw overseas. I’ve used them across Europe, Dubai and Southeast Asia, and the buying part trips up most first-timers — wrong documents, last-minute branch visits, or paying hidden markups. Here’s how to do it right, what it costs in 2026, and who should skip it.
Table of contents
- What a forex card is and why buy one
- Single-currency vs multi-currency: which to buy
- Documents you need to buy forex card
- How to buy a forex card online (step by step)
- Loading limits and the LRS rule
- Fees and charges to compare before you buy
- Forex card vs debit card vs cash
- Common mistakes and who shouldn't buy one
- Last-updated framing and final checklist

What a forex card is and why buy one
A forex card is a reloadable prepaid travel card, issued in partnership with Visa or Mastercard, that holds money in foreign currency rather than rupees. You lock the exchange rate the day you load it, so currency swings during your trip don’t touch your balance.
People buy a forex card mainly for three reasons:
- Predictable rates — no surprise conversion on every swipe.
- Lower fees abroad than a regular debit/credit card, which typically charges 2–3.5% forex markup.
- Safety — it isn’t linked to your bank account, and most cards can be blocked and replaced if lost.
It’s ideal for tourists, students and business travellers carrying a fixed budget. If you travel rarely or spend tiny amounts, a no-markup debit card may serve you better.
Single-currency vs multi-currency: which to buy
Before you buy forex card products, decide on the currency structure. The two options:
- Single-currency card — holds one currency (USD, EUR, GBP, etc.). Best if your whole trip is in one country or region.
- Multi-currency forex card — holds several currencies on one card, often 7–16. Ideal for multi-country trips like a Schengen tour or a Dubai-plus-Asia itinerary.
A multi-currency forex card avoids “cross-currency” charges — the 2–3.5% fee you pay when you spend in a currency your card doesn’t hold. For example, swiping a USD-only card in Paris triggers a EUR-to-USD conversion you didn’t sign up for.
My rule: match the loaded currency to where you’ll actually spend. Don’t load USD and assume it works everywhere — it doesn’t, and it costs you.
Documents you need to buy forex card
The paperwork is set by RBI rules and is the same whether you apply online or at a branch. Keep digital scans ready before you start.
- Passport — valid, with the photo and signature pages.
- Confirmed air ticket showing travel within 60 days.
- Valid visa (where the destination requires one).
- PAN card — mandatory for foreign-exchange transactions.
- A self-attested Form A2 / LRS declaration, usually pre-filled online.
That’s it for tourists. Students often need an admission letter and may load higher limits under the education category. The single most common mistake I see is applying without a confirmed ticket — banks won’t issue forex against a tentative booking.
How to buy a forex card online (step by step)
Buying online is now faster than visiting a branch, and the rates are usually better. The flow with banks like HDFC, ICICI, Axis or fintechs such as Niyo and BookMyForex looks like this:
- Step 1: Compare live rates and issuance fees across two or three providers.
- Step 2: Choose single- or multi-currency and the amount to load.
- Step 3: Upload passport, ticket, visa and PAN; complete video or digital KYC.
- Step 4: Pay from your bank account (avoid credit cards — they add charges).
- Step 5: The card is couriered to your address, often within 2–4 working days.
Activate it, set a PIN, and do a tiny test transaction before you fly. Order at least a week ahead so a delivery delay never becomes an airport crisis.
Loading limits and the LRS rule
How much you can load is governed by the RBI’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), which lets a resident individual remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year for permitted purposes, including travel.
Key points to remember:
- Minimum loads are small — often the equivalent of USD 100–200.
- You can reload the card from India while travelling, online, within your LRS limit.
- Under the 2023 changes, a 20% Tax Collected at Source (TCS) applies to overseas spending above ₹7 lakh in a financial year (as of 2026).
TCS isn’t a tax you lose — it’s adjustable against your income tax, so claim it when filing. Still, factor the cash-flow hit if you’re loading large amounts. Check the current threshold on the official source below before a big trip.
Fees and charges to compare before you buy
The sticker rate isn’t the full story. When you buy forex card products, weigh these costs:
- Issuance fee: ₹0–₹500 (many waive it on online purchase).
- Reload fee: ₹0–₹100 per reload.
- ATM withdrawal abroad: roughly USD 2–3 (or equivalent) per transaction.
- Cross-currency markup: ~3% if you spend in an unloaded currency.
- Inactivity fee: small monthly charge if the card sits unused.
- Refund/encashment fee on the leftover balance after your trip.
Ask specifically about the exchange rate margin over the interbank rate — that’s where providers quietly make money. A card with a “free” issuance but a 1.5% rate margin can cost more than a paid card with a tighter spread.
Forex card vs debit card vs cash
A forex card isn’t the only way to carry money abroad. Here’s how the three compare for an Indian traveller in 2026:
- Forex card: locked rate, low overseas fees, not tied to your bank — best for planned trips and budgets.
- International debit/credit card: convenient and widely accepted, but 2–3.5% markup plus dynamic-rate risk; good as a backup.
- Cash: essential for taxis, tips and small vendors, but risky to carry in bulk and bad rates if exchanged at airports.
The seasoned approach is a mix: load most of your budget on a forex card, carry one debit/credit card as backup, and keep a modest amount of local cash for day one. Never rely on a single payment method overseas.
Common mistakes and who shouldn't buy one
A forex card suits most international travellers, but it isn’t for everyone. Skip it if you take only one short trip a year with low spending, or travel to places where cards are rarely accepted.
Mistakes I see repeatedly:
- Buying at the airport counter — the worst rates you’ll ever get.
- Loading the wrong currency for the destination.
- Forgetting to activate the card or set the PIN before flying.
- Ignoring the leftover balance, then paying high encashment fees months later.
- Not noting the card’s blocking helpline before departure.
Buy your forex card a week ahead, load the right currency, and keep the provider’s emergency number saved offline. Reconvert any unused balance soon after you return to avoid inactivity charges.
Last-updated framing and final checklist
This guide reflects RBI rules and typical market fees as of 2026; exchange rates, TCS thresholds and provider charges change, so always confirm on official and provider pages before applying.
Quick pre-purchase checklist:
- ✅ Passport, confirmed ticket, visa and PAN ready.
- ✅ Decided single- vs multi-currency.
- ✅ Compared rate margin, not just issuance fee.
- ✅ Ordered 5–7 days before travel.
- ✅ Activated, PIN set, test transaction done.
- ✅ Emergency blocking number saved offline.
Get those right and a forex card becomes the most stress-free way to spend abroad — predictable, cheaper than plastic, and safer than carrying a wad of cash.
Key facts & figures
| Detail | Source |
|---|---|
| Under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme, a resident individual can remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year, including for international travel. | Reserve Bank of India |
| A 20% TCS applies on overseas remittances/spending above ₹7 lakh per financial year under LRS (as of 2026). | Income Tax Department, Government of India |
| Forex/travel prepaid cards must be issued against valid travel documents such as a passport and confirmed ticket under RBI foreign-exchange rules. | Reserve Bank of India |
| PAN is mandatory for foreign-exchange transactions in India. | Reserve Bank of India |
Frequently asked questions
How many days before travel should I buy a forex card?
Order at least 5–7 days before departure if buying online, so courier delays don't catch you out. Branch issuance can be same-day, but online usually offers better rates. Always activate and test the card before you fly.
What documents are needed to buy a forex card in India?
You need a valid passport, a confirmed air ticket showing travel within 60 days, a valid visa where required, and your PAN card. A self-attested LRS/Form A2 declaration is also required, usually pre-filled during online application.
Is there a tax when I load a forex card?
Yes. As of 2026, a 20% Tax Collected at Source (TCS) applies to overseas spending above ₹7 lakh in a financial year under the LRS. TCS is adjustable against your income tax, so you can claim it when filing your return.
Single-currency or multi-currency — which should I buy?
Buy single-currency if your trip stays in one currency zone, and multi-currency for multi-country itineraries. A multi-currency forex card avoids cross-currency charges of around 3% when you spend in a currency your card doesn't hold.
Can I reload a forex card while travelling abroad?
Yes. Most cards can be reloaded online from India by you or a family member, within your LRS limit, and the balance updates quickly. Keep your bank's net-banking access and the card details handy before you leave.
What happens to the leftover balance after my trip?
You can keep it for your next trip or encash it back to rupees through your provider. Reconvert sooner rather than later, since unused cards may attract a small monthly inactivity fee and you'll get a less favourable rate the longer you wait.
Related visa guides
- Best Forex Card for International Travel from India 2026: Fees, Charges & How to Buy
- Forex Card Hidden Charges in India 2026: Markup, ATM, Encashment
- International Travel Checklist for Indians: Must-Have Documents 2026
Sources & official references
- Reserve Bank of India — Liberalised Remittance Scheme FAQs
- Income Tax Department, Government of India
- Reserve Bank of India — Master Directions
Photo: Jim Evans via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)