Bletchleyite
Veteran Member
A while ago, I was in London with a friend and her teenage daughter. The effect of buses being cashless, for this ultra-occasional visitor to London, was that she was effectively excluded from using buses. The trip was planned at short notice, so no time to sort out an Oyster for the child; the policies in use then (and I think now) meant that she couldn't use the bus without paying a disproportionate surcharge.
The policy with regard to non-London-resident children is I agree a bit silly (and really has nothing to do with cash). But an Oyster at adult rate could have been obtained at any Tube station (for now). London bus fares are so cheap that compared with elsewhere in the country it would more be the equivalent of the adult paying child fares, not vice versa!
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With contactless the account can be wiped before a lost / stolen card is blocked. Depending on circumstances eventually at least some might be refunded but there is the problem of both lack of card and empty bank account at the time.
If there is fraud all of it will be refunded. I think a lot of people are unduly concerned about it. You report it promptly, they give you a list of transactions, you tell them which ones weren't you. That's it. If you have phone banking you can stop it very quickly indeed.
It's also an issue with cash, anyway. The majority of card skimming is at ATMs by people fixing devices to the front of them. The only way to completely avoid it is to draw cash over the counter only - very few people do that now.
Using a card in a major store is negligible risk. Maybe perception but potentially a bigger risk at a small trader who can skim the card or access the transaction details. My manager at work, now retired, who also was a good personal friend would only pay cash at his convenience store and never use the local independent filling station. What about street markets, food stalls at events etc where the trader is not known or even if details available unlikely to be recorded then of course become uncontactable. Not to mention taxi & private hire. If paid to the office reading out card details perhaps a bigger risk than using a reader in the vehicle ?
The details might not be used right away but a month or more later.
Just keep an eye on your account, you'll catch it very quickly. Often the bank will catch it for you!
Without cash how do I leave a Christmas tip for the refuse teams on the bin and for the postie on the letter box ? Buy a load of £5 high street gift cards which can not be used at the pub for a round or towards a meal ?
Can't say I ever do that, but I guess vouchers would be the way.
My barber's are still cash only.
That'll change.
How to pay tea / coffee fund at work ?
Easiest way is probably to forget having a collection and just have a rota for replenishing the supplies.
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