Niyo Global vs Forex Cards in India 2026 — Which Saves More on International Spend?

⚠ Verify current terms on the issuer’s websiteReward rates, fees, caps and benefits on Indian credit cards are revised by issuers from time to time. The data on this page was last reviewed in April 2026 and is accurate to the best of our research, but we cannot guarantee it reflects the exact terms your specific application will be offered. Always confirm current joining fee, annual fee, reward structure, and monthly caps on the card issuer’s official website before applying.

Last verified: May 2026 against Niyo Global (SBM Bank), HDFC ForexPlus, Axis Multi-Currency, ICICI Sapphiro Forex, and Standard Chartered Multi-Currency current rates.

The 30-second answer

For Indian travellers spending abroad in 2026:

  • Niyo Global Card (debit card, savings-account-linked) — 0% forex markup, real-time Visa exchange rate, no preloading needed. Best for spontaneous international purchases and ATM withdrawals.
  • Prepaid forex cards (HDFC ForexPlus, Axis Multi-Currency, ICICI Sapphiro Forex) — Lock in exchange rate at load time, multi-currency support, but 1-2% loading fee + reload fees. Best for planned trips with budget certainty.

For most users in 2026, Niyo Global wins on flexibility, real-time rates, zero markup, and no loading fees. Forex cards win only if you want exchange-rate certainty for a budgeted trip or you’re carrying multiple currencies.

Niyo Global Card — what it is

Niyo Global is a Visa debit card linked to a savings account at SBM Bank or Equitas (depending on the variant). You fund the savings account in INR before/during travel; transactions abroad swipe at the network’s spot rate with zero markup from Niyo. Niyo absorbs the typical 1-3.5% forex markup that other Indian cards charge.

Key features:

  • 0% forex markup — Niyo absorbs the network conversion fee
  • Real-time Visa exchange rate at point of swipe
  • No card-level loading fee (you just transfer INR to the linked savings account)
  • No ATM withdrawal fee from Niyo’s side (foreign ATM may charge their own ₹200-500)
  • App-based limit controls, instant block/unblock, transaction notifications

Prepaid forex cards — how they work

Forex cards (also called multi-currency or travel cards) are prepaid Visa/Mastercard cards loaded with one or more foreign currencies (USD, EUR, GBP, AED, SGD, JPY, AUD, etc.) at the time of purchase.

  • You buy and load the card before your trip at a fixed exchange rate
  • Transactions abroad debit the loaded balance — no markup since currency is pre-converted
  • Multi-currency cards let you carry 6-15 currencies in one card
  • Reload-able from India during the trip via internet banking

Side-by-side comparison

FeatureNiyo GlobalPrepaid Forex Card (typical)
TypeVisa debit, savings-linkedVisa/Mastercard prepaid
Forex markup0% (Niyo absorbs)0% on pre-loaded currency, but 1-2% loading fee at purchase
Exchange rateReal-time Visa spot rateLocked at loading time (could be better or worse than spot)
Loading feeNone1-2% of loaded amount
Reload feeNone (just NEFT to savings)₹150-500 + GST per reload
ATM withdrawal abroadNo fee from Niyo (₹200-500 from foreign ATM)$2-3 per ATM withdrawal + foreign ATM fee
POS swipe abroadFreeFree
Currencies supportedSingle — INR base, converted at spotSingle (USD card) or multi-currency (6-15 currencies)
Cross-currency fee (using USD-loaded card in EUR country)N/A — always converts from INR3-3.5% cross-currency markup
App / online supportExcellent (Niyo app)Varies — some banks have decent apps; others poor
Lost card replacement abroadBlock via app; backup SBM card availableBank-dependent; some emergency cash assistance

Worked example — ₹2 lakh trip to Europe

Profile: 10-day Europe trip, ₹2 lakh budget. ₹40K hotel (pre-paid in INR), ₹60K flights (pre-paid in INR), ₹1 lakh on-trip spend (food, attractions, shopping, ATM cash).

Niyo GlobalHDFC ForexPlus EUR card
Loading / preparationJust transfer ₹1L to Niyo savings via NEFT (free)Buy EUR at HDFC: ₹1L ÷ 90 (rate at purchase) = €1,111. Loading fee 1.5% = ₹1,500
POS spends abroad~₹98,500 (small Visa spread)~₹1,00,000 (locked rate)
ATM withdrawals (₹15K total)~₹15,000 spend; ₹400 foreign ATM fee × 2 = ₹800~₹15,000 spend; $2.50 per withdrawal × 2 = ₹450; + ATM fee ₹400 × 2 = ₹800; total ₹1,250
Cross-currency transactions in Switzerland (CHF, ~₹15K)~₹15,000 (Visa converts INR-CHF directly)~₹15,500 (3% cross-currency markup on EUR-loaded card)
Total cost (₹1L spend equivalent)~₹99,300~₹1,02,750

Niyo Global delivers ~₹3,500 saving (3.5%) on this trip. For frequent travellers, that compounds to meaningful annual savings.

When Niyo Global wins

  1. Flexibility-first traveller. No need to predict trip currencies in advance.
  2. Multi-country trips. Visa converts INR to whatever local currency at spot rate — no cross-currency markup.
  3. Spontaneous travel. No loading time; just transfer INR before departing.
  4. Small / mid-sized trips. Loading fees on forex cards eat into the small-amount economics.
  5. Want zero forex hassle. Truly the simplest international spend setup.

When forex cards win

  1. You want exchange-rate certainty. If INR may weaken before/during your trip, locking the rate via forex card protects against currency depreciation.
  2. Big planned trip with fixed budget. Loading 100% of trip budget upfront helps stick to the plan.
  3. Carrying spouse/family. Can issue add-on cards on the same forex card.
  4. Specific multi-currency need. If trip definitely covers 3+ countries with stable currencies.
  5. Niyo SBM/Equitas branch unavailable in your city. Niyo’s KYC opening can take 3-5 days; forex cards are issued instantly at most bank branches.

Decision matrix

ProfilePick
Spontaneous traveller, frequent international visitsNiyo Global
Multi-country trip (Europe, SE Asia)Niyo Global (no cross-currency markup)
Single-country, planned trip with budget capForex card (locked rate certainty)
Want backup card alongside main credit/debitNiyo Global
Need ATM cash abroad frequentlyNiyo Global (lower withdrawal cost)
Premium credit card holder (Infinia, EPM)Use credit card for spends (3.3% reward); Niyo Global as ATM backup

Pitfalls

  1. Niyo’s underlying bank changes. Niyo has switched banking partners (DCB → Equitas → SBM). Existing accounts get migrated; check current partner before opening.
  2. Forex card loading rate may be poor. Banks markup the load-time exchange rate by 1-3% above mid-market. Check the rate before loading.
  3. Forex card unused balance refund. Refunding leftover balance back to INR after trip incurs another 1-3% markup.
  4. Niyo daily transaction limits. Default ₹2L/day; can be raised via support.
  5. ATM availability. Some countries (rural Europe, remote Japan) have limited Visa ATM access. Carry some local cash as backup.

FAQs

Is Niyo Global truly 0% markup?
Yes from Niyo’s side. Visa charges a small 0.5% network fee that’s absorbed by Niyo, so customer-facing it’s effectively 0%.

Can I use Niyo Global as my regular savings account in India?
Technically yes — it’s a real bank savings account. But interest rates and features are weaker than mainstream banks. Use it primarily for travel.

Are forex cards safer than Niyo for fraud protection?
Both have similar protection (Visa zero-liability + RBI rules). Forex card has slight edge: if compromised, only the loaded amount is at risk vs your full Niyo savings balance.

Can I top up Niyo from any bank account?
Yes — UPI, NEFT, or IMPS from any Indian bank account.

What if my Niyo card is blocked abroad?
Niyo issues a backup SBM card with the same account. Order in app, gets delivered to your local address. For instant cash, use ATM with the active card or credit card cash advance (expensive).

Sources & references

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