A complete expat guide to using cajeros automáticos in Spain — choosing the right machine, dodging the Dynamic Currency Conversion trap, understanding ATM networks, and the recent legislation that gives you the right to withdraw cash for free at a branch.
Withdrawing cash from a Spanish ATM (cajero automático) sounds simple — until you discover that the same €200 withdrawal can cost you anything from zero euros to nearly €15 depending on which screen button you tapped, whose machine you used, and whether you fell for the polite-sounding "Dynamic Currency Conversion" offer.
This guide walks you through everything you need to know as a tourist, second-home owner or full-time expat: which ATM networks exist in Spain, how the foreign-card surcharge actually works since the 2015 reforms, why you must always pay in euros (not your home currency), how to spot a skimmer, what the daily and weekly withdrawal limits really are, and how to use contactless and cardless withdrawals at the big four banks.
We'll also cover what to do if a Spanish ATM swallows your card, how to make a complaint to the Banco de España or OCU if you've been overcharged, and why your travel insurance and personal-accident cover are crucial if you're targeted by an ATM thief or distraction-robbery team in a tourist hotspot.
Coming from the UK, Ireland, USA, Australia, Canada or South Africa, the Spanish cajero experience throws up surprises that can quietly cost you hundreds of euros a year.
Unlike most European countries where free ATM withdrawals are the default for domestic cardholders, Spain runs three competing ATM networks — Servired, Euro 6000 and Sistema 4B — and the banks who own them charge each other (and you) for using "the other side's" machines. Even with a Spanish card, using a competitor's cajero can cost €0.65 to €2.
For foreign cards the picture is more complex still. Since the entry into force of Real Decreto-ley 11/2015, Spanish banks can only charge one fee, paid by the customer's own bank. In practice this means the ATM screen displays a "comisión" that your home bank may or may not pass on to you — and it's almost always cheaper to accept it than to fall for the Dynamic Currency Conversion alternative.
The regulator overseeing all of this is the Banco de España, the national central bank, which supervises commissions, fee transparency rules, and handles complaints. The consumer body OCU (Organización de Consumidores y Usuarios) publishes an interactive calculator that lets you see, in real time, what each Spanish bank charges at each network's ATMs.
Three other things to know before you tap that first PIN in:
Here are the six fundamentals every expat or visitor needs to grasp before pulling cash from a Spanish cajero.
Spain has three interbank ATM networks: Servired (BBVA, CaixaBank, Santander, Sabadell), Euro 6000 (Ibercaja, Kutxabank, Unicaja, Abanca) and Sistema 4B (legacy). Most machines now accept all Visa/Mastercard, but the back-end fee depends on the operator.
Since 2015, only one party can charge — usually the ATM operator passes a fee to your home bank, which then passes it (with possible markup) to you. Typical charge: €1.50–€5 per withdrawal, plus your home bank's foreign-transaction fee.
Dynamic Currency Conversion is offered by every Spanish ATM to foreign cards. The screen invites you to "lock in the exchange rate in pounds/dollars". This costs 3–12% extra. Always tap "Continue without conversion" / "Pay in EUR".
Most Spanish banks set a domestic daily limit of €600 (debit) and €1,000–€3,000 weekly. Foreign cards are capped per-transaction at €300–€600 at most machines. CaixaBank ATMs in tourist areas allow up to €1,000 per transaction.
BBVA, CaixaBank and Santander now let customers withdraw without inserting a card — using contactless card-tap, mobile NFC, or a one-time code generated in the banking app. Useful if your card is at home or your wallet is being watched.
By law, your own bank cannot charge you a commission for withdrawing cash over the counter (ventanilla) at one of its branches during business hours, as long as you're a current-account customer. A handy fallback when you need large sums.
Whether you've just landed at Málaga airport or you've been living in Valencia for a decade, this guide is built for you.
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Get a Travel Insurance Quote →This is the single biggest source of confusion (and hidden fees) for both Spanish residents and visitors. Get to know your networks and you can almost always find a free or near-free cajero.
Historically, Spain had three competing interbank networks. Today they still exist as fee-charging "brands", even though the actual switching infrastructure has been consolidated through Redsys:
Servired — the largest network, dominated by BBVA, Santander, Bankinter, Banco Sabadell and ING España. Around 32,000 ATMs nationwide. The Servired-on-Servired transaction is fee-free for the cardholder if they're a customer of any Servired-affiliated bank.
Euro 6000 — primarily the network of regional and ex-savings banks: Ibercaja, Kutxabank, Unicaja Banco, Abanca, BCC and Cajamar. Around 13,000 ATMs, with strong presence in the north, Galicia, Aragón and Andalucía.
Sistema 4B — the historic legacy network of the old "4B" banks. While the brand still exists technically, most 4B machines have been integrated into Servired or operate under CaixaBank's independent network, which is sometimes treated as its own network in fee tables.
| Network | Main Banks | ATM Count | Foreign-card fee (typical) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Servired | BBVA, Santander, Sabadell, Bankinter, ING | ~32,000 | €1.50–€3.50 |
| Euro 6000 | Ibercaja, Kutxabank, Unicaja, Abanca, Cajamar | ~13,000 | €1.50–€2.95 |
| CaixaBank (independent) | CaixaBank (formerly La Caixa) | ~9,500 | €0–€5.50 |
| Independent / tourist ATMs | Euronet, Cardpoint, YourCash | ~3,000+ | €2.95–€12.00 |
Avoid the bright-yellow Euronet ATMs in airports, train stations and Las Ramblas–style tourist streets. They charge €5–€12 per withdrawal and aggressively push DCC at the worst rate you'll see. Walk 200 metres in any direction and you'll find a Santander, BBVA or CaixaBank machine charging a fraction of that.
Spanish ATM fees confuse even Spanish residents. Here's the legislation, in plain English.
For decades, Spanish cardholders were "double-charged" when using a competitor's ATM: once by their own bank for using a foreign machine, and again by the ATM operator. Real Decreto-ley 11/2015 ended this in October 2015. Today only one party can collect a fee, and the rule works like this:
For Spanish cards using a Spanish ATM, this means the fee is usually small (€0.65–€1.50) and is taken from your bank, not directly from your account.
For foreign cards (UK, EU, US, etc.), the rules are slightly different because the home bank isn't bound by Spanish law. The ATM screen will display a fee — say €2.95 — and ask if you accept. If you accept, that amount is added to the withdrawal and shows on your home statement. Your home bank may also charge:
Use a fee-free travel debit card (Chase UK, Starling, Monzo, Wise, Revolut Premium) and withdraw from CaixaBank or a Santander/BBVA ATM in chunks of €200–€400. Always pay in EUR, not your home currency. Done correctly, total cost can be under €1 — sometimes zero.
This is the single most expensive mistake any tourist or expat makes. Learning to spot and refuse DCC will save you hundreds of euros over a year.
Dynamic Currency Conversion (DCC) is when the ATM offers to convert your withdrawal into your "home" currency (GBP, USD, AUD, etc.) before debiting your card. The screen will say something polite like:
This sounds helpful, but the exchange rate offered by the ATM operator is always worse than the Visa, Mastercard or your home-bank rate — typically by 3% to 12%. On a €200 withdrawal, that's between €6 and €24 you've voluntarily handed over for nothing.
The correct answer is always: "Continue without conversion" / "Pay in EUR" / "Decline / Sin conversión". Your card will then be charged €200, and your home bank applies the Visa/Mastercard wholesale rate (which is within 0.1% of the mid-market rate). The savings are immediate and significant.
| Withdrawal scenario | Charged to card | True cost (GBP) | You overpaid |
|---|---|---|---|
| €200 + DCC accepted (12% markup) | £197.50 | ~£176.00 | £21.50 |
| €200 + DCC accepted (6% markup) | £186.50 | ~£176.00 | £10.50 |
| €200 + DCC declined (Visa rate) | £176.20 | ~£176.00 | £0.20 |
| €200 + Wise/Revolut + DCC declined | £176.00 | ~£176.00 | £0.00 |
Pickpocketing near ATMs is the #1 tourist crime in Barcelona, Madrid and Seville. Don't travel without proper cover.
Get a Travel Insurance Quote →Spanish ATMs and Spanish issuers have their own limits, and your foreign card has separate limits set by your home bank. Both apply.
For Spanish cardholders, the default limits at the big four banks are roughly:
For foreign cardholders, the per-transaction limit at most Spanish ATMs is €300, but CaixaBank machines often allow €600–€1,000 per transaction (with a foreign-card surcharge). Your home bank's daily card limit is separate — UK debit cards are commonly capped at £500/day, US cards at $500–$1,000.
Banknotes available are €10, €20 and €50. The €100, €200 and €500 notes (the latter no longer issued since 2019) almost never come out of an ATM. €500 has been quietly removed for anti-money-laundering reasons since 2019, although it remains legal tender.
If you need to withdraw €2,000+ in one go (for example, to pay a rental deposit in cash, which is common in Spain), book a counter withdrawal at your own bank's branch. By law your own bank cannot charge you for this, and they can give you €50 or €100 notes on request, subject to availability.
Spanish cajeros all support multiple languages. Here's exactly what to expect and how to navigate without surprises.
Modern Spanish ATMs default to Spanish but switch to English (and usually French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, Russian, Mandarin and Arabic) automatically when they detect a foreign card. Here's the typical flow:
Retirar = withdraw. Saldo = balance. Comisión = fee. Sin conversión = without conversion. Cancelar = cancel. Aceptar = accept. Tarjeta = card. Recibo / Tique = receipt.
All four major Spanish banks now let you withdraw cash without inserting a card. Here's how each system works.
CaixaBank — Their CaixaBankNow app generates a single-use 6-digit code valid for 60 minutes. You enter the code at any CaixaBank ATM and it dispenses cash directly. Useful if you forgot your wallet or want to send cash to someone else without sharing the card.
BBVA — Tap-and-cash via their app: you select "Cash withdrawal without card", confirm with biometrics, and tap your phone (NFC) at the BBVA ATM contactless reader. You can also generate a code to share with a third party for emergency cash.
Santander — Their "Cash with mobile" works via the Santander app with a QR code displayed on the ATM screen — you scan it with the app and authorise the withdrawal.
Sabadell / Bankinter — Similar code-based systems via their respective apps. Sabadell's "Bizum + ATM" pilot lets you send cash directly to a phone number that the recipient can then collect at any ATM.
Foreign cards on the major schemes (Visa/Mastercard contactless) can also tap at most modern Spanish ATMs without inserting the card — but you'll still pay the foreign-card fee, and you'll still face the DCC offer.
Cardless withdrawals reduce skimmer risk to almost zero because the card never enters the slot. If you're using a cajero in a high-risk area (Las Ramblas, El Raval, Sol, Tirso de Molina, Triana at night), the cardless or contactless option is meaningfully safer.
Spain is a safe country overall, but ATMs in tourist hotspots are a top-three crime target. Here's how to protect yourself.
The most common ATM crimes in Spain, in rough order of frequency:
Safer-ATM checklist:
Note the time, ATM ID and bank. Call your home bank immediately to block the card. The Spanish bank that owns the ATM cannot release a swallowed foreign card; it'll be destroyed by their security crew within 24–72 hours. Get a replacement sent express to your Spanish address.
Almost no expat knows about this rule, but it can save you a small fortune on large withdrawals.
Spanish banking-conduct rules, supervised by the Banco de España, state that a bank cannot charge its own current-account customer for a cash withdrawal made over the counter (en ventanilla) at one of its own branches during normal opening hours, using either a debit card or a passbook (libreta).
This is particularly useful when you need:
In practice, walk into your branch with your DNI/NIE/passport and your debit card or libreta, ask politely for a "reintegro en ventanilla", and you'll be served (sometimes after a short queue). Branches may discourage this — they prefer you to use the cajero — but they cannot refuse you, nor charge you.
If a branch tries to charge you, you can complain to the Banco de España consumer complaints service. Complaints from foreigners are accepted in English and processed within 90 days.
Spanish ATMs are reliable but not perfect. Here's the exact playbook for the four most common failure modes.
Failure 1: The ATM debits you but doesn't dispense the cash.
Failure 2: The ATM eats your card.
Failure 3: You realise you were charged a huge DCC markup.
Failure 4: Your card was cloned and someone else is withdrawing in Spain.
Lost cash, cloned cards and ATM theft — covered under our DGSFP-regulated Spanish travel insurance.
Get a Travel Insurance Quote →After helping thousands of expats navigate Spanish banking, here are the seven errors we see most often at the cajero.
The questions expats and visitors ask us most often about Spanish ATMs.
CaixaBank ATMs offer the most consistent foreign-card experience: clear English, optional fee disclosure, and a high per-transaction limit (often €1,000). BBVA and Santander are similar. Avoid Euronet and any "independent" ATM in a tourist street — they routinely cost 5–10× more.
Yes, all of them work at any Spanish ATM that accepts Visa or Mastercard. Wise and Chase typically charge no fee up to a monthly limit (£200–£500). Revolut Standard gives €200/month free, then 2%. Monzo and Starling give £200/month free at any ATM worldwide. Always decline DCC.
Because the ATM operator earns a markup — typically 3–12% — when you say yes. Visa and Mastercard have repeatedly warned consumers about this practice, and EU Regulation 2019/518 now requires the ATM to show the comparison to the official ECB rate. Always say no.
There's no withdrawal limit imposed by EU AML rules at the ATM itself. However, single cash transactions of €10,000 or more in Spain (e.g. depositing in a bank, paying for a car) trigger reporting under Ley 10/2010 and require declaration. Carrying €10,000+ across an EU border also requires declaration.
Yes, but only at your own bank's deposit-capable ATMs (most BBVA, Santander and CaixaBank machines accept deposits). You insert notes directly without an envelope, and they're credited to your account in real time. Foreign cards cannot deposit — only their issuing bank's customers can.
No. The ECB stopped issuing the €500 note in 2019 due to its use in money laundering. Spanish ATMs typically dispense €10, €20 and €50 notes. For €100s or €200s, you generally need to request them at a branch counter.
Cajero = ATM machine. Ventanilla = teller window inside the branch. By law, your own bank can charge you for cajero withdrawals at competitor banks, but cannot charge you for ventanilla withdrawals at your own bank during business hours. The ventanilla is your free fallback.
Travel insurance personal-money cover typically pays up to €250–€500 for cash stolen within 24 hours of a documented ATM withdrawal, subject to a police denuncia within 24 hours. Home insurance contents covers cash kept inside the property (typically up to €600). Without a denuncia, no insurer pays. Always file the police report first.
File a written complaint first with the bank that owns the ATM. If they don't resolve it within 30 days, escalate to the Banco de España Servicio de Reclamaciones. You can submit in English. OCU also provides templates and free advice to members.
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