A typical tourist withdrawing €200 from a yellow Euronet ATM at Madrid Airport pays about €11 in surcharges and another €16 in hidden currency markup — €27 on a €200 withdrawal. Multiply across a 10-day trip and that's the cost of a nice dinner, gone. Spanish locals never use these machines. This post is the 15-minute explainer that ends the fee bleed.
Spain has roughly twice as many ATMs per capita as the European average, but a disproportionate share of the ones in tourist zones, airports, and train stations are operated by Euronet — a non-bank ATM network that aggressively pushes a fee model designed to extract maximum money from foreign cards.
Spanish banks (BBVA, Santander, CaixaBank, Sabadell, ING) are visible everywhere too — but you have to walk an extra two blocks to find one. Tourists who don't know the difference grab the nearest yellow machine and lose money every time.
A flat fee for using the machine. Euronet charges €4.95–€8.95 per withdrawal regardless of amount. Spanish bank ATMs typically charge €0–€3 for foreign cards (some are free for cards on the same network — Cirrus, Plus, etc.). This fee is shown on screen before you confirm, so you can at least see it.
This is where the real money disappears. After you enter your PIN, the ATM (or restaurant card terminal) offers to "convert" the transaction into your home currency at "today's rate." The rate offered is 5–12% worse than the Visa/Mastercard network rate your bank would have given you. On a €200 withdrawal that's €10–24 of pure margin to the ATM operator, on top of the surcharge.
The trick: the conversion screen presents this as a convenience ("you'll know exactly what you're charged in USD!") rather than what it actually is (a 5–12% surcharge). The big-letter "ACCEPT" button is always the bad option.
These are operated by Spanish retail banks and are widely available in Spanish cities. Fee structures are published on their websites and shown on screen before you confirm the withdrawal. Fees below are accurate as of May 2026 — verify on the ATM screen before completing the transaction.
| Bank | Brand colour | Foreign-card surcharge | DCC pressure? |
|---|---|---|---|
| BBVA | Blue | €0 for many EU cards · €1.95 for non-EU | Low — asks once, accepts EUR without nagging |
| ING | Orange | €0 for partner-network cards (N26, Wise, some US cards) | Low |
| Santander | Red | €2.95–€4 for non-EU cards | Medium — DCC offered but easy to decline |
| CaixaBank (La Caixa) | Blue star logo | €5 for non-EU cards | Low |
| Sabadell | Dark blue | €0.50–€3 depending on card | Low |
| Bankinter | Orange/black | Varies — usually €1.95–€3 | Low |
These are non-bank ATM networks operated by independent companies — they make their revenue from transaction surcharges and from offering Dynamic Currency Conversion at exchange rates set by the operator (rather than the Visa/Mastercard interbank rate). The fees themselves are legitimate and shown on the ATM screen before you confirm. We mention them so you can make an informed choice.
| Operator | How to identify | Typical fee structure (May 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Euronet | Yellow and blue branding. Often standalone (not attached to a bank branch). Concentrated at airports, train stations, and central tourist areas. | €4.95–€8.95 surcharge per withdrawal. DCC is offered by default — declining it puts the transaction through your home bank at the network rate. On a €200 withdrawal, accepting both surcharge and DCC can total €15–30 in combined costs. |
| Cardtronics & similar independent networks | Generic black or branded machines, often inside convenience stores or hotels rather than at bank branches. | Fee structures vary; typically comparable to other independent operators. Always check the screen disclosure before confirming. |
| "No commission" tourist-targeted ATMs | Multilingual signage promoting "free" or "no commission" withdrawals. | The advertised waiver of the surcharge is typically offset by a less favourable exchange rate via DCC. Read the screen carefully before confirming. |
All fees stated above are sourced from on-screen disclosures at the respective ATMs in May 2026 and from publicly available fee schedules. Fee structures can change; verify on the ATM before confirming any transaction. This guide reflects the author's analysis as a Spain travel resource and is not financial advice.
A typical Spanish bank ATM walks you through 5–6 screens. Here's what each one says and what to choose:
DCC isn't just at ATMs. When you pay by card in restaurants, hotels, and souvenir shops, the terminal often asks the same question: "En euros o en dólares/libras?" ("In euros or in dollars/pounds?"). Or the screen offers two buttons: "Pay in EUR" vs "Pay in [your home currency]."
Always say "euros" / pick EUR. Same logic, same rule. The waiter or shop clerk usually doesn't care which you pick — it's just an upsell programmed into the terminal.
The biggest single thing you can do is get a fee-free travel debit or credit card. Any of these works well in Spain:
Whichever you pick, do not rely on a single card. Bring two cards from different networks (one Visa, one Mastercard) on different banks. ATM card-eating and card lockouts are rare but it does happen.
Spain is more card-friendly than it used to be. Contactless is universal in cities. But you still need cash for:
Realistic budget: €50 cash on arrival, top up to €100 mid-trip. Don't carry more than €200 at once.
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