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Review: Is Revolut any good, and how does Revolut work?

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This is our review of the Revolut Mastercard / Visa travel money card, including a look at how Revolut works.

If you apply via the links in this article and top up £10, you will receive a plastic Revolut card for free.  This saves you the standard £4.99 delivery fee and is a special offer we have arranged for Head for Points readers. 

EDIT May 2020:  The free card offer is currently suspended due to coronavirus.  You will NOT receive a free card if you use the link in this article.

Without the plastic card your use of Revolut would be limited to online shopping.

Why should I get a 0% foreign exchange fee card for travelling?

As the Lloyds Avios Rewards Mastercard is no longer available to new applicants, there are no travel rewards credit cards which offer fee-free overseas purchases.

If you use a rewards credit card when travelling, you will incur a fee of 3% on everything you buy. This can never be justified by the miles and points earned on the transaction. It may be justified if you need to hit a spending target to trigger a sign-up bonus or a voucher such as the British Airways American Express 2-4-1.

Over the next week or so we are looking at a few no and low FX fee options. We reviewed Tandem a few weeks ago (click here). Here is our review of the WeSwap Mastercard travel money card and we will also be looking at some 0% credit cards.  Our review of Starling Bank is here if you want to compare.

All of these products have different features – there is no ‘right’ answer. Some are more fiddly than others, some are prepaid cards and some are credit cards, some have added benefits such as 0% interest on purchases.

If you DO want to earn miles and points from your foreign spending, the best option is Curve Card. Curve is free and has a 1% foreign exchange fee (2/3rd lower than most cards). It recharges your purchase to any other Visa or Mastercard you own in Sterling. This means you earn miles and points on the underlying card without paying the usual 2.99% foreign transaction fee. Curve Card will pay you £5 for trying it outread our article here.

Revolut card review

The Revolut Mastercard or VISA travel money card

The Revolut travel money card started out as just a no-fee pre-paid travel money card.  You need to load it before you spend on it.

That was, and still is, a loss leader feature to encourage you to sign up.  Revolut’s recent funding round raised $250 million at a very heady valuation of $1.7 billion, because of the perceived potential to turn it into an online-only bank.

A lot has been happening over the last year like the introduction of travel insurance and crypto currency options. You can also use your Revolut account as your UK or Euro current account. The Premium version of the Revolut card features disposable virtual cards for online shopping.

The official Revolut website is here.

What is Revolut?

Like WeSwap, Revolut is an online platform with a smartphone app and a linked plastic Mastercard or Visa card.  (Revolut is issuing both Mastercard and Visa cards and it seems to be random which one you get).  It lets you exchange your money for any foreign currency fee free.

Revolut works as a digital wallet for a total of 25 currencies including Sterling, Euros and US Dollars and lets you transfer money for free to friends or businesses.

To use it in the real world (shops, restaurants, ATM), you need to order a physical plastic card which will give you 0% FX fees on your spending and money withdrawals abroad.

Unlike WeSwap, Revolut exchanges immediately at the real exchange rate without adding any fees.  There is, however, a 0.5% -1.5% mark up at the weekend depending on the currency.

Because Revolut uses the interbank rate, you should be getting slightly finer pricing than using a Visa or Mastercard 0% card as those use the centralised Visa and Mastercard exchange rate.

How does Revolut work?

You can sign up on the Revolut website here. You will need to download the Revolut app and verify the account with your phone number. You can then start adding money from your bank account or using a credit card (Mastercard or VISA).

You will need to verify your identity with your passport, driving licence or ID card if you want to spend more than a total of £500 with your Revolut card.

If you want a physical card, and if you’re planning to use Revolut for payments abroad you will need the card, you can order one for via the app. The card usually has a £4.99 delivery charge but if you order it via our link and top up with £10 you will get the card for free.  This is a special offer from Revolut for Head for Points readers.

How to get the free card

In order to get the physical card free of charge you must click on our Revolut link here.

Insert your mobile number and click on the URL which Revolut will send to your phone. This will open the Google Play or Apple App Store.

Download the app, open it and create an account.

You need to top up £10 before you can select and order your free card (standard delivery).

Then verify your identity (tap more -> profile -> verify identity) and your card (either Mastercard or Visa) will be with you in a few days.

As well as the UK, you can also get a Revolut card if you live in:  Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Republic of Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland.

Review of revolut card

How do I spend money?

You can top up your Revolut account by bank transfer, debit or credit card.  There is no longer a fee for credit card top ups following the change in UK law in January.

My TSB credit card for example treats Revolut top-ups as a ‘purchase’.  Some credit cards treat Revolut as a cash advance (no points, cash fee).  Other cards such as those issued by Creation, eg IHG Rewards Club Mastercard, seem to treat it as a purchase (would earn points, no fee) although a comment below suggests that may have changed.   There could be potential here for generating ‘free’ frequent flyer miles by loading your card from a high earning Visa or Mastercard such as the Virgin Atlantic Rewards card (0.75 miles per £1) and using it for debit card transactions.

The money will sit in your Revolut account in the currency you’ve topped up but you can move it in between your different currency accounts at the current spot exchange rate.  If you have a bank account in the UK, are travelling to the US in a couple of weeks and the current exchange rate feels exceptionally good, you could exchange your money in advance to avoid a possibly worse exchange rate later.  This works for all currencies I listed above.

When you make a purchase abroad, the transaction is debited from your £ balance or in the country’s currency if you have stored money in your virtual wallet.

Can I make ATM withdrawals abroad with Reolut?

Yes, but free cash withdrawals are limited to £200 per month.  After that you pay 2%.

With the premium card your free cash withdrawals are limited to £400 per month.

How can I send money?

If you have money left on your Revolut card after a trip, you can transfer it back into your bank account.

You need to set yourself up as a beneficiary by entering your bank details manually and will then be able to select the amount of money you want to transfer. Afterwards you will get a notification that the money will be reaching your account the same day and when I last tried it my money was in my current account within less than an hour.

As well as paying money back into your own account you can also pay another person or a business with your Revolut app. Simply add the bank details and your money will be transferred.

Your Revolut account can also double as a regular UK and/or Euro bank account.  Your card has its own sort code and account number.  This is how the company sees the product developing.  They hope that you will pay your salary into your Revolut account, use the card for all of your spending at home or abroad and also pay your bills with it.

Revolut travel money card review

What limits does Revolut have?

Daily cash withdrawals from ATMs are limited to €5,000 via Mastercard and US$1,000 via VISA.

What charges does Revolut have?

A spare Revolut card costs £5 + £5 delivery fee

Transfers to friends or businesses take two business days – you must pay £5 to get the money across in one business day

Transactions of up to £5,000 per month are free, thereafter the fee is 0.5% unless you have the Premium card outlined below

At the weekend Revolut uses the exchange rate from Friday and adds, for most currencies, a 0.5% mark up

Three currencies DO incur a fee when spending – Thai Baht (1.5%), Russian Ruble (1.5%), Ukrainian Hryvnia (1%)

You can withdrawal up to £200 per month from an ATM without paying a fee but you pay 2% after that (£400 if you have the Premium card)

What else?

Revolut has introduced a spare change savings option. You can set up Revolut Vault which will let you round up your spending to the nearest £ or set up recuring payments.  Money sitting in Revolut Vault will not be touched when you use your card, but you can transfer it back into your regular Revolut account.

Revolut has a Premium card

For £6.99 per month you can upgrade your card to a Premium card. This card comes with a free ATM withdrawal allowance of £400/€400 per month as well as unlimited FX volume.

As a Premium customer you also get free overseas medical insurance, free global express delivery, exclusive priority 24/7 customer support and exclusive Premium promotions.  To be honest, however, I struggle to see the value here unless you are hitting the £5,000 monthly cap for FX transactions.

There are four different Premium card designs which you can order for free.  A new feature is free disposable virtual cards which make onine shopping more secure by creating a new card number everytime you make a purchase.

In the near future you will apparently be able to purchase airport lounge access via the Revolut app at a wholesale rate.

Conclusion – is a Revolut card worth getting?

Here at Head for Points we are generally not keen on prepaid foreign currency cards. If you have a good income then you will get the best deal by getting a standard credit card with 0% foreign exchange fees and using that abroad. We will be looking at a few of those products, such as the Virgin Money Travel credit card and – under reader pressure! – Aqua, in this series.

You may get slightly better FX rates with Revolut because it uses the exact interbank rate between Monday and Friday but I am not sure that the tiny difference in rates justifies the requirement to continually top up.

WeSwap (here is our review of that), Revolut and the like are well suited to people who are less likely to qualify for credit cards, or for parents to give to their children when travelling. There may be other members of your family who will find it more useful than you.  Pre-paid cards are a bit fiddly as you need to top up your account via the app and you either need to plan your spending in advance, are relying on wifi or will have to top up way more than you will be spending.

That said, there is a big difference between WeSwap and Revolut. With WeSwap you need to exchange your money one week in advance to get the lowest 1% fee.  Revolut exchanges immediately at the actual exchange rate (which you can monitor in the app) and unless you load the card at the weekend, you won’t be charged a fee at all.

It is possible that you are happy using the pre-paid card rather than potentially restricting your ability to get a miles earning credit card by adding a 0% FX credit card to your credit report.

Revolut is free – and with our link you will also get the physical card for free – so signing up and giving it a try does not cost you anything.  You may find that Revolut works for you.

You can find out more about Revolut on their website here.


earns points from credit cards

Want to earn more points from credit cards? – April 2025 update

If you are looking to apply for a new credit card, here are our top recommendations based on the current sign-up bonuses.

In 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

Get 5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

You can see our full directory of all UK cards which earn airline or hotel points here. Here are the best of the other deals currently available.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 30,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

30,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

18,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Earning miles and points from small business cards

If you are a sole trader or run a small company, you may also want to check out these offers:

American Express Business Platinum

50,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year Read our full review

Capital on Tap Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits Read our full review

Capital on Tap Visa

NO annual fee, NO FX fees and points worth 1 Avios per £1 Read our full review

British Airways American Express Accelerating Business

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

Comments (223)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Jimmy says:

    “It is possible that you are happy using the pre-paid card rather than potentially restricting your ability to get a miles earning credit card by adding a 0% FX credit card to your credit report.”

    What does that mean? How does it affect your credit report?

    • Matt says:

      Every time you apply for credit it is recorded on your file. So he means adding another credit card to your wallet (a 0% travel card in this instance) may not be beneficial to some people.

    • Alex W says:

      If you get one of the 0% credit cards, eg virgin money, that will show on your credit history. That could affect your ability to apply for another, more lucrative credit card.

  • the real harry1 says:

    The 2.99% never bothers me that much when I use Gold Amex abroad. Here’s the logic: you spend £100, you get 200 MR points worth £2 (@1p), they have cost you £3 extra in fees. On a £500 spend you’re down £5.

    Having said that, I must get my Clarity card working again, somehow it’s stopped working. With Clarity, you can make ATM withdrawals abroad then fund them same day (ie transfer money into a/c back in UK) and you won’t pay interest or transaction fees.

    • TripRep says:

      Hey TRH, nice to see you back on here. 🙂

    • The Original Nick says:

      I agree Harry, plus, you’ll be closer to the sign up bonus on the card in normal circumstances.

    • Mike says:

      Harry – utterly delighted to see you back. Like many things in life I didn’t really how much I missed you until you were gone. You are the voice of common sense. I saw your update to us all the other day – hope things continue to progress well

    • Bill says:

      It was mentioned on a different post that everytime you make a cash withdrawal with the clarity it leaves a mark on your credit report. I’ve stopped using mine for ATMs

      • Mikeact says:

        Confirmation please from someone.

        • the real harry1 says:

          Not sure but I know that some people pre-fund the a/c so that it is in credit, then there would presumably be no credit check as you’re not borrowing anything. Strictly speaking this is against Clarity T&Cs but I don’t think it’s a biggy.

        • Lumma says:

          The whole pre funding Halifax clarity seems rather pointless when you can get a starling account for free. You’ll probably even be offered an overdraft with Starling which means you’ll be able to withdraw the cash and then transfer the exact amount back in when you get the notification/back online

      • Matt says:

        Not true at all, free cash withdrawals is the one of the selling points

        • Matt says:

          I should add in theory those who may travel abroad on a weekly basis and use a clarity card for large amount of withdrawals would be at risk. I was thinking from the perspective of people like me who just use it for holidays.

          Been using mine for almost 8 years for at least 2 holidays per year and never noticed anything negative

      • DeeW says:

        All cash advances leave a mark on your credit report. Shouldn’t be too adverse

        • Genghis says:

          That’s why I’ve now moved to Starling for ATM withdrawals

    • Andrew says:

      Huh? Spending £3 to get only £2 of benefit doesn’t bother you?

      I could understand if it’s your employer’s money or you’re chasing a sign up bonus but if you have a Halifax Clarity card in your wallet you’d be mad to use your gold amex

      • John says:

        Well he spent hours shopping in Tesco and reselling on ebay to get a handful of Avios…

        • the real harry1 says:

          Well, i don’t really use Amex that much abroad in any case. I don’t travel for work and our holidays are generally to the same place in the sun, where we have a bank account & cards, so most of our holiday spend is drawn from that in local currency. I just need to fund the foreign account from time to time. I wondered if Revolut or any other card gives me better options to fund that account than using HIFX/ Moneycorp etc?

          Can’t see it at the moment, HIFX reinstated free transfers abroad so we just lock in an exchange rate we’re happy with and transfer over the money.

      • the real harry1 says:

        @Andrew it’s not even as bad as that – I have 2 arguments:

        1. I am not a serial churner of Gold Amex (for my own reasons) and tend to keep it going for 12 months to collect the 10,000 extra points for £15K spend. Now whilst I can’t claim that foreign spend will be a big part of that £15K, it does help hit the target and therefore I can argue that I’m getting back 2 MR points on foreign spend plus another 0.67 MR point for hitting the £15K target. If you allow me a 1p value on the MR points, that gives me a net cost of 33p for every £100 I spend abroad.

        2. We’re only talking a few quid in any case and I’m not going to get too bothered by losing a few quid. (Because we mostly use the local bank account, spend on Amex whilst abroad isn’t that huge.) But yep, lazy of me not to have got the Clarity working again, my wife’s partner Clarity card is fine (I’m the supp as it happens) so I wonder what it is with mine?

  • Mark says:

    My “home” currency is €, and my experience recdntly was although I exchanged € into US$ in anticipation of having to settle a cruise bill in US$ when the transaction went through it settled by debiting my € account. When I queried this I was told that the system will debit your home currency. I
    If this is the case it sort of makes me question ” why multi currencies, even if ( as is the case) the exchange rate is interbank spot rate?

    • Eugene says:

      That a problem with the system surely as you change the money specifically to make a payment. m!

      I was thinking of setting up a USD account then getting an International USD Amex Plat or similar then accruing miles at a USD rate and paying spot from GB into a USD via Revolut USD account. By your experience maybe thats not possible. ?

      • John says:

        No problem to do what you want, as you are initiating the payment. The problem occurs when the merchant invoices you in USD but decides to charge your card in GBP using their own conversion rate. And you may not have GBP on your Revolut making it a double whammy

    • egg says:

      Was this by using your card?
      You can pay from other currencies easily with the App.
      I have used the IBAN/SWIFT payment option in the app a few times to send & receive euros & dollars for Cryptocurrency. It always uses the correct currency I choose.
      I guess its the card is locked to your home currency?

    • Federico says:

      On the cruise if you selected to pay in Euro or the cruise itself charges in euro then the euro account will be charged or if the usd account didn’t have enough money to cover the expense.

      • Bagoly says:

        Federico: Exactly my thoughts.

        Mark: I accidentally stumbled on a way to avoid this issue.
        My home currency (determined by country of ‘phone contract) is in a currency different from that in which I load the card. So my home currency always has a zero balance.
        As there is no spread cost for changing during the week, loading up Monday-Friday and then converting to the currency you are most likely to need in the future/a generally safe one, E.g. USD or CHF, means that on average you will not suffer any extra cost.

    • Tim M says:

      The multi-currencies allow payments to be made from the app to bank accounts in those currencies without fee and convert at the moment of your choosing. I am not sure how incoming payments in foreign currencies are treated if you happen to have the appropriate FX account on the app. Anyone tried this?

      The only other purpose is to play at FX trader but it has to be converted back to the home currency to be available on the card.

      • Bagoly says:

        For EUR and GBP you get a unique bank account number.
        In time they intend to expand this to other currencies.
        For other currencies it’s a shared account with reference for allocating.
        Both work fine – you are right that you should set up the currency before money is sent.

        If all income is in GBP, there are other options with pros and cons as mentioned on this page.

        It is for incoming amounts in foreign currencies that I got Revolut.
        E.g. You bill clients (particularly if a one-off) in EUR, or your cousin who lives in the USA wants to send you USD200.
        The only competition that is close that I know of is Transferwise (already has USD and AUD unique bank accounts as well as EUR and GBP, but charges 0.5% spread)

    • John says:

      It sounds as if you got DCC’d by the cruise company. Tricky to avoid if they just take your card details and charge you at their convenience.

  • egg says:

    Revoult let you do IBAN/Swift transfers for Free.

    This is the most used feature by me!

    • Tim M says:

      It is not the most used feature by me but the most valuable. UK bank overseas payments are very expensive these days – £25-£30 a pop.

  • Paul says:

    Two questions

    Would this be the most efficient way to transfer money overseas to Euro bank accounts? I had been using transferwise but they still have some fees.

    HFP always says they prefer 0% credit card but what do you do about ATM withdrawals?

    • James123 says:

      Revolut is cheaper than Transferwise as no spreads charged up to 5k a month. If you are changing more than 5000 then you need to upgrade to Revolut premium, which may or may not be cheaper than transferwise depending on how much you exchange.

      • Paul says:

        Revolut it is then especially as I already have a card. Hadn’t thought about using it at all

    • Rob says:

      Curve or I swallow the odd £3 fee. How much cash do you really use on holiday? Virtually nil, perhaps £100 for a week.

      • Paul says:

        Depends where you are going. I’ve been around South America and south east asia recently and card acceptance can be low, although admittedly things are cheaper! So can get up quite high over a few weeks, especially with visa or tourist taxes for entering historic areas.

  • Federico says:

    I have Revolut since January and it’s fantastic.

    Best exchange rates possible and no fee. I have saved a lot on that, especially dollars for my trip tomorrow. I exchanged my money when it was $1.42 instead of now $1.35.

    Withdrawal yes you have £200 or £400 pcm but if you live in London you have euros or usd atms so you withdraw money from there free of charge.

    Rob I didn’t see that you mentioned that yet there are no a fully licensed FSCS so your money aren’t covered in case they go busted.

    I’ll have a full and complete overview from tomorrow eve when I’ll be in America 🙂

    • James123 says:

      Do the EUR and USD cashpoints actually debit from your account in EUR/USD? I thought they converted at an outrageous rate to GBP hence I never use them

      • Phil says:

        Same qn from me. Also where are they? I work in zone 1 yet, surprisingly, this is news to me!

      • Eugene says:

        You are correct. they gouge you on the rate

      • Gabriel says:

        You can ask to be charged in Eur/Usd, and Revolut will make the conversion for you. Very useful, although I only have a Euro cash machine close to my home (zone 4)

      • John says:

        It’s tricky to know in advance.

        One friend with a card from a eurozone country tried to withdraw €20 and he got charged €21.xx on his bank statement, but some months before or after that, another friend withdrew €20 at another machine and was charged exactly €20.

        Maybe try with €20 and see what happens then always use that machine in the future… or just keep €100 in your travel wallet and withdraw at a proper bank on the continent…

  • Kate Hyde says:

    Useful article, thanks. Could you add the Caxton FX card on to your growing list of similar cards to review?

  • Memesweeper says:

    Rob re. limits — there is also a £ 25,000/year top up limit for new customers unless you go through an elaborate extra ID and income checking process.

    I’ve got the card and use it a little in he UK and lots in Euroland. Works Ok most places although my local Chinese rejected it so always have a backup! Unless/untill they get a banking license your money deposited is at risk. For modest savings the round-up feature is nice.

    Thanks for the heads-up on the unfavourable weekend rate — I’d missed that in the small print.

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