The international ATM is the most expensive channel for Brazilians abroad, and almost no one runs the numbers. A 5.38% IOF on credit withdrawals, a 3-6% bank spread, a USD 3-5 local operator fee and a R$ 20-30 fixed fee from the Brazilian bank stack up to 15% on each withdrawal. We map the Plus, Cirrus, Allpoint and MoneyPass networks, which Brazilian cards zero out fees, and the one strategy that makes ATMs make sense again.
14 min read
The most expensive channel for Brazilians abroad
Ask ten Brazilian travelers how they pay for small expenses in Lisbon, Bangkok or New York. Seven will say "I withdraw at the ATM." Ask what the last withdrawal cost, no one can answer with precision. It's the most opaque FX channel abroad — and, in most setups, the most expensive.
The problem isn't the ATM itself. It's the stack of fees that overlap without showing up on screen: 5.38% IOF on credit card withdrawals, a 3-6% bank spread baked into the rate, a local operator fee that ranges from USD 3 to USD 8 per withdrawal, a R$ 20-30 fixed fee from the Brazilian bank per operation and, in some cases, dynamic currency conversion (DCC) that adds another 4-7%.
This piece breaks it down network by network, fee by fee, and shows the one configuration where an ATM abroad still makes sense. No affiliates, no sponsorship.
How the international ATM actually works
When you insert your card at an ATM in Lisbon, the machine queries the brand (Visa or Mastercard) through a global withdrawal network — Plus for Visa, Cirrus for Mastercard. The network validates the card with the Brazilian issuing bank, releases the withdrawal in local currency and the local operator (the physical owner of the ATM — Multibanco, Travelex, Euronet) charges its fee on top.
That's the first cost: the local operator fee, ranging from €1.75 (Multibanco in Portugal) to €5.90 (Euronet in tourist areas). You see this number on screen before confirming — but almost no one pays attention because the number looks small in isolation.
In parallel, the Brazilian bank charges its own international withdrawal fixed fee, which only shows up on the statement. Itaú, Bradesco and Santander charge between R$ 20 and R$ 30 per operation. Digital banks like Nubank charge about USD 3.50 + IOF, and Wise/Nomad waive within limits.
On top of all that, the IOF: 5.38% if the withdrawal was made with a credit card ("foreign credit withdrawal" category) or 1.1% if debit ("international remittance" category). That's the article's most important distinction and the one most Brazilians miss.
Finally, the FX spread: the rate applied isn't the commercial or tourist rate — it's the issuer's internal rate, which usually loads 3-6% on top of PTAX. That's the invisible cost that appears when you compare the statement with the day's rate.
To understand IOF and spread without the ATM in the middle, read IOF and spread on international cards: the guide no one writes properly.
The four global networks you need to know
| Network | Brand | Where it works | Size | Typical operator fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa Plus | Visa | Global | ~3 million ATMs | USD 3-6 |
| Mastercard Cirrus | Mastercard | Global | ~2.5 million | USD 3-6 |
| Allpoint | Independent (Visa/MC) | US, Canada, UK, Australia, Mexico | ~60,000 | USD 0 (partners) |
| MoneyPass | Independent | Mostly US | ~37,000 | USD 0 (partners) |
Plus and Cirrus are the universal networks — any international Visa or Mastercard card accesses any ATM with the matching logo. The advantage is coverage. The disadvantage is that the local operator always charges.
Allpoint and MoneyPass are "partner" networks — banks and fintechs like Nomad, Wise (partially), Chime and Capital One 360 contract these networks to offer fee-free withdrawals to customers. The catch: you only see the benefit if your card is a partner.
In Brazil, the Nomad debit card zeroes the operator fee at any Allpoint worldwide (up to USD 800/month). The Wise card gives 2 withdrawals or £200 free per month on any network, then charges £0.50 + 1.75% per withdrawal.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
Expertise




