Uncover the Shocking Truth: 22 Tourist Scams You’ll Wish You Knew Before Your Next Trip

Uncover the Shocking Truth: 22 Tourist Scams You’ll Wish You Knew Before Your Next Trip

Always pay in the local currency when you can. A lot of restaurants especially in Europe will ask if you want to pay in USD or Euros and it’s usually cheaper for your credit card to pay in Euros. Just know what your bank and credit cards do when you’re abroad.

33Mastermine , randomawful Report

Two women laughing and holding drinks together, illustrating social situations where tourist scams can occur. If you’re a young guy and some attractive women come out of nowhere thinking you’re cute and asking to go to a bar, don’t go.

There’s a very common scam where they’ll start ordering ridiculously priced alcohol for you all night. You only find out at the end of the night when you get a bill for hundreds of dollars.

Mikeavelli , Michael Discenza Report

The Colosseum in Rome with few tourists nearby, illustrating common tourist scams travelers should know. We wanted to visit the Colosseum in Rome. All the way towards it from the tube station, there are dozens of people offering “discounted tours” – you join a group, they get you in for a reduced price, seems good. Except it isn’t. These tour tickets are about €20 per person, which seems reasonable until you get to the entrance to the Colosseum and see that it’s €12 for an adult, or €2 for a student. My wife and I got in for €14 because she still had a valid student ID.

The exact same thing happened on the way to the Vatican – people coming up to us insisting that it’s cheaper to get in if we buy museum tickets. It costs nothing to go into the Vatican! They rely on tourists who don’t know any better, see the queue for the Vatican museum and think it’s the queue to get inside the city. It isn’t.

DarkNinjaPenguin , FeaturedPics Report

Colorful tuk-tuk taxi on a busy street with passengers inside, illustrating common tourist scams travelers should know. If you go to Bangkok and are on the way to the grand palace, you will encounter very friendly guys falsely telling you that the grand palace is closed due to some ceremonies. They are very friendly and are good salesman. They offer to take you on a Tuk Tuk ride to other temples for a really good price. On the way to these other temples the Tuk Tuk driver will be very friendly and tries to win your trust.
After the second temple or so, he will start talking about some great promotion for a tailor that makes custom made suits, or about some promotion of emerald sales and will eventually drive you to one of those places and if you refuse to buy anything the friendliness changes. The Tuk Tuk driver will just take you the next temple and then disappears after you paid him.

How to avoid this scam: Be very suspicious of very friendly Thai people around the grand palace telling you that the grand palace is closed. The best is probably just to say thank you and not get involved into any conversation with them.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Post Comment

RSS
Follow by Email