Duke of Marmalade
Registered User
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- 4,687
I am retired and have a property in France and have had a Britline account for many, many years. I do need their current account facilities so their deposit options are a bonus.I've gone through Britline, and picked up a few points:
Two account offerings, Premium and Standard
Account handling €1 per month
Insurance €2 per month
Visa/Mastercard Debit/Credit Card €43.35 pa, unsure if this is mandatory, cheaper "other" card option available
DD and SEPA transfers FOC
Cash withdrawls (ATM) €1ea from the fifth withdrawal per month
Joint Accounts Possible
Appears to be a single full function current accept, with interest paid on balance
No withholding tax
Initial deposit €3,000
Mixed reviews on Trustpilot, negatives appeared to be Brits involved in French property transactions/disposals for the most part.
I've completed a current account application and uploaded the ID and AML documents. Next step is a call from them in "2 days" once my docs have been checked.
Will ask questions then when I hear from them. On my list of questions are:
Security, e.g. TFA ?
DGS details ?
Is a plastic card options or mandatory ?
Charges typically applying when account is used for deposit and EFT withdrawals only ?
If anybody else wants to read through the online info first and has any questions post them here and I'll add them to my list.
If that proves NOT* to be the case it would be a showstopper for me.DGS does stack up with this.
That’s odd. I took them from the scale of charges document on their website. Will review when I talk with them.BTW, the fees you have listed above are their old fees.
Those fees shocked me. I checked my account and I did indeed pay €76 in fees over the last year of which €64 were for a card that I never used. I never tried cancelling my card. Anyway I need the French current account.I looked into Britline a while ago. I decided not to add it to the best buys given the fees but this new term deposit offers has me reconsidering.
As indicated above (but the fees are higher than the fees mentioned above), you are forced to open a fee-paying current account in order to open a savings account.
The two current account packages are: (You are not allowed sign up to a different Credit Agricole current account package)
- "Premium" which costs €183.60/year plus other usage fees.
- "Essentiel" which costs €109.80/year plus other usage fees.
- Some deposit accounts are for residents only.
- Livret A has additional (non deductable in Ireland) taxes for non-residents.
Given the high fees, the 4.50% account is really only worth it if you have a large deposit.
If that proves to be the case it would be a showstopper for me.
That’s odd. I took them from the scale of charges document on their website. Will review when I talk with them.
Those fees shocked me. I checked my account and I did indeed pay €76 in fees over the last year of which €64 were for a card that I never used. I never tried cancelling my card. Anyway I need the French current account.
Yes, it's a branch based in Caen, Normandy.Despite the name "britline" it seems it's a regular bank - just a branch of Credit Agricole (rather than britline being a middleman like raisin), that's an advantage over the Raisin banks - you've just a single SEPA transaction to worry about. Also for anyone able prepared to go above the DGS the maximum limit is 250,000.
My bad, word “not” omitted reversing the meaning of what I intended to sayWhy would it be a showstopper if the DGS is in place?
I talked to my contact in Britline and she said that I can cancel my credit cards and that my fees will then only be €1 per month. Another saving down to AAM!Sent Britline an email with a number of queries last night. Had a competent response containing actual answers this morning. Early days yet but that puts them ahead of a lot of the other outfits that appear on this forum, the Irish banks included.
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