What is the opinion of using a credit card to pay for your Safari ? Going to South Africa in August and have the option of paying at the end of the hunt. Would bringing cash be better?
What is the opinion of using a credit card to pay for your Safari ? Going to South Africa in August and have the option of paying at the end of the hunt. Would bringing cash be better?
I am forever thankful that you are not an outfitter and that none I am aware of take your approach
Ive yet to work with an outfitter in the US or abroad that has hit me for an upcharge..
Taxidermists are another story.. most taxidermists Ive used for whatever reason want a 3-3.5% upcharge if you use the card..
Yep seems like every local restaurant wants 3.5% for using debit or credit card where I live.I am forever thankful that you are not an outfitter and that none I am aware of take your approach
Ive yet to work with an outfitter in the US or abroad that has hit me for an upcharge..
Taxidermists are another story.. most taxidermists Ive used for whatever reason want a 3-3.5% upcharge if you use the card..
Paying by credit cards is pretty common in South Africa. Higher volume and lower cost hunts. In other countries, it’s lower volume and longer more expensive hunts. Paying by wire and paying final bill after returning home is standard in those countries.Yep seems like every local restaurant wants 3.5% for using debit or credit card where I live.
In Africa I would clarify if credit card is an option, at the end of our hunt in Zimbabwe this past July one hunter in camp asked if he could pay his balance in full on the spot by credit card.
The outfitter simply does not take credit cards, we were give an invoice at the end of the hunt and had 10 days after our return to pay the balance by wire transfer.
I thought that was REALLY trusting of the Safari company to let $40K +/- of accounts receivable leave the country with the promise to pay upon returning home.
I think You are exaggerating costs in this case. If you have an extra $3000 to pay at the end of your hunt there is a cost for convenience. I can pay the final bill on credit card and maybe a built in fee of 4%, but I’ll get 1.5-2% back anyway, so it’s actually less and be done with it there and then. Or I could pay by wire and pay the bank $50-$75 to wire the money. The difference is negligible. No outfitter is accepting American Express to be talking about 7%.Well, since these are forces of economics there are only two not-great conclusions @mdwest
1.) The businesses are overcharging everybody to have enough padding to allow for the risk of CC reversals, additional taxes, and the 3.5%-7% international surcharge.
OR
2.) They're terrible at business and don't understand impact of expenses against gross revenue
If this wasn't a universal truth of economics, tariffs wouldn't increase the costs of goods sold. Any tax, fee, surcharge, or overhead on a business is ultimately absorbed by the consumer.
Nothing is free, the consumer pays for everything, always.
I payed my SA safari with a credit card. Used the cash to tip. It was not the whole amount because I wired a part beforehand. Felt better without a lot of cash on me.What is the opinion of using a credit card to pay for your Safari ? Going to South Africa in August and have the option of paying at the end of the hunt. Would bringing cash be better?
I think You are exaggerating costs in this case. If you have an extra $3000 to pay at the end of your hunt there is a cost for convenience. I can pay the final bill on credit card and maybe a built in fee of 4%, but I’ll get 1.5-2% back anyway, so it’s actually less and be done with it there and then. Or I could pay by wire and pay the bank $50-$75 to wire the money. The difference is negligible. No outfitter is accepting American Express to be talking about 7%.
Well, since these are forces of economics there are only two not-great conclusions @mdwest
1.) The businesses are overcharging everybody to have enough padding to allow for the risk of CC reversals, additional taxes, and the 3.5%-7% international surcharge.
OR
2.) They're terrible at business and don't understand impact of expenses against gross revenue
If this wasn't a universal truth of economics, tariffs wouldn't increase the costs of goods sold. Any tax, fee, surcharge, or overhead on a business is ultimately absorbed by the consumer.
Nothing is free, the consumer pays for everything, always.
Unless you can correct me, I’m unaware of any foreign transaction fees applied to the vendor. It’s passed on to the customer on some cards. It will appear as a 3% foreign transaction fee. No travel card (airline, hotel, Bank’s travel card, many options) has that fee.You must remember that in the USA our card issuers charge not just a processing fee through the card network, but an international transaction fee and a foreign currency fee. It's simply because there is greater risk for an American using a CC in Africa than for a South African using a card in his local region.
The other unfortunate thing about Americans is we sadly have a lot of unscrupulous scammers. A common scam is to use a credit card and then dispute the charges. It made international news this week when one such scum-bag American got arrested by Interpol for spending $160,000 on timeshares via their credit card, resold the weeks of timeshare condos to others, pocketed the cash, and disputed several years of legitimate charges. It happens all the time but rarely does it lead to prosecution for fraud. If I was an outfitter in Africa, I certainly wouldn't want to have a $40k charge on CC only to find out that the whiny client wasn't happy with their silver-medal trophies and wants to play the CC dispute game.
If you're talking about trivial incidentals being charged, I'm sure that's lesser risk and may be more common in some regions.
you leave out a 3rd option..
they accept the risk...
risk can be avoided, mitigated, or accepted..
you're only offering risk mitigation strategies or assuming if a business doesn't mitigate or avoid that they are terrible at business... (every MBA program on the planet, and every major business on the planet that employs risk managers would argue that you're wrong)..
risk acceptance does not immediately mean "terrible at business"..
experience and/or market analysis may well be telling a business that potential impact or likelihood of occurrence is low.. or the benefit of accepting risk outweighs the potential cost..
multi billion dollar businesses "assume" risk every single day.. a good friend of mine is a Sr. VP at JP Morgan Chase.. he is a corporate risk guy (specifically works in Cyber risk now, but has worked in financial and property risk in the past)... JPMC has a very robust and detailed system by which they determine which risks they will accept, which ones must be mitigated, and which ones must be avoided..
I hardly think the 4th largest business on the planet, that accepts certain financial risks every single day, is terrible at business or doesn't understand the impacts of expenses against gross revenue..
My firm is a tiny fraction of the size of JPMC.. but we are hardly "small" (350+ employees, global presence on 4 continents, etc).. we accept certain risks every day.. that is simply how business is conducted.. if you want to heavily mitigate or avoid all risks, you wont be in business very long..
Risk acceptance may well be occurring in the hunting industry as well.. for example, how many hunters might choose to hunt with someone else if easy, painless, no cost payment options weren't available? Is it worth it to an outfitter to pass on 3.5% if that means they might land more customers?
How many $10K hunts are going to be lost when the outfitter says "yeah.. about that credit card... Im going to have to hit you for an additional 7%.. oh.. plus an additional 20% (per your gut feeling in your first post).. because I don't trust you"... but you're welcome to go to your bank and wire some African dude you don't know cash.. because I expect you to trust me..."...
or.. what about the outfitter that's been in business for more than fifteen years and only once in that period of time did he ever have a client attempt to not pay a balance (this isn't a fictitious story.. it is the real story of Bos en Dal).. and ultimately that client ended up paying (almost a decade later.. but he did indeed pay).. Why is that outfitter suddenly going to start mitigating or avoiding a risk, that has proven to have an extremely low probability and historically has had no consequential impact on the business?
Sometimes its worth eating a 3% cost on your CC customers.. in order to have more customers.. have happier and more satisfied customers.. etc..
Not all outfitters are as stupid or as "terrible at business" as you might assume..
One I am thinking about right now has an advanced business degree, and runs two large (multi-million dollars in annual revenue) businesses in addition to his hunting business... and.. doesn't charge a credit card fee...