The Disappointing Wise Debit Card
I use Wise.com on a weekly basis for international business transactions with low fees, as do most of the people I know running online businesses. So there was a burst of excitement this week when they announced that their multi-currency debit card would be available to US account holders again after cutting us off years ago. Turns out the terms are terrible though, like a 2% fee every trip to the ATM or 2% plus $1.50 if you withdraw 3+ times in one month. Here’s my full take on it: The New Wise Debit Card is a Dud.
Who Drinks the Most Beer?
The Visual Capitalist site always has some fun charts and infographics packed with information. One of the latest is a rundown of beer consumption per capita around the world. If this were a World Cup of Beer, the Europeans would dominate. The Czechs drink almost 50% more than the silver medalist Austria and the next 10 contenders beyond that are all European. Panama is a surprise after that, drinking 81 liters per adult per year, barely edging out Bulgaria and Mexico. Gabon and South Africa rate higher than any Asian nation, with Cambodia being tops on that continent. Australia (#24) and the UK (#25) must be tipping fewer pints these days and craft beer heaven USA is in the passing lane: #27 with 61 liters per year.
Four Destinations to Avoid
When Tony Wheeler gives his opinion on something travel-related, people listen. As the founder of Lonely Planet, the guy who wrote their first guidebooks, he’s earned plenty of respect. In an article titled, “I’m Not Going There Anymore,” he runs down four destinations he won’t return to in their current state. Two of them I’ve never visited and probably won’t: Russia and Saudi Arabia. One I haven’t returned to since the ‘90s because I know it would make me cry: Bali. The last one I have no choice on because I’ve got friends and family there—the USA—but I can’t argue with anyone who has sworn it off for the next few years.
Travel Abroad, Work From Your Home Network
None of us has tried this, but Mark F. of sister newsletter Recomendo sent me this intriguing service for remote corporate workers who want to make it look like they’re still at the home office in Austin, not logging in from Auckland while traveling. Called KeepYourHomeIP.com, this service lets you “work remotely and still appear to be working from home, ensuring that your Internet access is secure and private. This means that your traffic cannot be identified as originating from a VPN service…” At less than $500 for the business option and no subscription fees, it seems like a great solution.
UNCLASSIFIEDS:
Instagram loves SafetyWing; your wallet doesn't. Find smarter long‑stay travel medical insurance plans that beat the usual suspects on SafeAndNotSorry. Compare 20+ options instantly with zero sign‑up required.
Conversations that elevate hospitality. Top Floor interviews creators and insiders for tactical tips, burning questions, and the funniest, craziest, weirdest tales from the Loading Dock. Business meets travel—surprises guaranteed. Listen here.
No more roaming fees! Stay connected in 200+ countries without popping open your phone: get an eSIM card from Airalo and hit the ground running after a quick download. Check rates where you’re headed here.
Reach 19,500+ working travelers with an unclassified ad in Nomadico for $75—in a newsletter with an average 56% open rate. Or get 4 weeks for $200 at this link and increase your awareness and clicks.
Go for a Schwab Investor Checking account. No acct minimums, no fees including no intl fees, and they refund all ATM fees.
The KeepYourHomeIP.com service does require a subscription, $8 per month. If you try to put the device in your cart, you’ll see that it asks you to select a subscription first.
If someone already has a computer at home that’s always on, they could use tailscale.com to achieve the same. It’s up to the individual if they fall under the personal vs. business plan. From my interpretation of their FAQ, if someone is just using it to bounce back out of their network, it would fall under personal use. Personal is free, business is $6 per person.