Rare POA1 Posted January 24 #1 Share Posted January 24 Random question. If you are on one of our bucket list cruises to Fiji and the islands of the South Pacific, do you need local currency? If so, can you get it to on the ship or do you need to go to AAA or a US bank? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cruisinsusin Posted January 24 #2 Share Posted January 24 Based on our experience on a transpacific as well as a land based trip to French Polynesia, most larger merchants and restaurants accept credit cards but some travel suppliers, taxis and smaller merchants want local currency. There were not local currencies on the ship and we did not want to be looking for an ATM right after disembarking so prepurchased some local currency from our bank before travel. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
57redbird Posted January 24 #3 Share Posted January 24 We used a credit card that doesn't have foreign transaction fees. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare kazu Posted January 24 #4 Share Posted January 24 10 minutes ago, POA1 said: Random question. If you are on one of our bucket list cruises to Fiji and the islands of the South Pacific, do you need local currency? If so, can you get it to on the ship or do you need to go to AAA or a US bank? We did the 35 day Hawaii, Tahiti, Marquesas cruise (did not include Fiji though). There were a couple of ports where the local currency was needed at small stores or vendors and we all just ordered it though our banks in advance - a very nominal amount. Most of the island would happily accept U.S. $$ and some preferred them. What was a must was that the U.S. $ not be torn, old (faded or badly wrinkled). Crisp bills were accepted readily. Make sure you have small denominations as any change is in the local currency. Credit cards were readily accepted by some of our tour operators, major stores, etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cruising Katie Posted January 24 #5 Share Posted January 24 39 minutes ago, cruisinsusin said: Based on our experience on a transpacific as well as a land based trip to French Polynesia, most larger merchants and restaurants accept credit cards but some travel suppliers, taxis and smaller merchants want local currency. There were not local currencies on the ship and we did not want to be looking for an ATM right after disembarking so prepurchased some local currency from our bank before travel. In Ontario, in Major Cities, we have currency exchanges. If they don't have what you want for whatever country, they can order, only takes a few days. You can return any paper money, for a refund, but no coins. I always ask my cabin staff if the South Pacific is their regular route and if so, leave coins for them, along with extra tip. They are so amazing. Only big stores will take Credit cards, and in places, it is just locals, selling their crafts. Kate Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare cruising sister Posted January 24 #6 Share Posted January 24 I am currently on the Grand Australian cruise and have not needed local currency on the islands. They keep telling us we need it and brought people on board to exchange currency but once we got off the ship they wanted US dollars. I would not stress about it. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare rafinmd Posted January 25 #7 Share Posted January 25 One thing I've done is make my first purchase with a crisp $20 bill and get some of the local currency as change. I think it's worked fairly well for me. Roy 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
X-elite Posted January 25 #8 Share Posted January 25 A few days ago in Fiji on Volendam, "HFC Bank" set up a money exchange on Deck 3 in the atrium. They brought security and the ship had two security personnel making sure passengers didn't steal anything... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oakridger Posted January 25 #9 Share Posted January 25 In Tahiti and Moorea, taxis and small vendors usually will only take XPF (French Pacific Franc). Larger stores and hotels will take credit cards. I will get some XPF from my bank in the USA before leaving but there is an ATM at the Faa'a PPT airport and in Papeete and a couple of them on Moorea. ~Nancy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Tahitianbigkahuna Posted January 25 #10 Share Posted January 25 (edited) In my 31 trips to French Polynesia I've never had an issue with stores, taxis, restaurants or most excursion vendors accepting the USD. On some of the smaller islands they prefer XPF and for this reason I always get some before our trip from our bank. The smaller islands don't have easy access to a bank on their little island. Most of the Cook islands vendors want NZD. Cruise lines have their own protocols in regards to local currencies. One cruise line my provide exchanges ... others may not. You need to ask the cruise in your on. Edited January 25 by Tahitianbigkahuna 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
possum52 Posted January 29 #11 Share Posted January 29 On 1/25/2024 at 4:28 AM, POA1 said: Random question. If you are on one of our bucket list cruises to Fiji and the islands of the South Pacific, do you need local currency? If so, can you get it to on the ship or do you need to go to AAA or a US bank? Which islands are you looking at? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare POA1 Posted January 29 Author #12 Share Posted January 29 4 hours ago, possum52 said: Which islands are you looking at? Fanning Island & French Polynesia. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
possum52 Posted January 30 #13 Share Posted January 30 Fanning Island is part of The Republic of Kiribati and the currency is Australian dollars (note US notes may be accepted). Fanning Island (Tabuaeran) is quite remote and it is not easy for the locals to exchange foreign currency. It is very much off the grid except for some solar power. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now