Does your choice depends on somehing? And from what country are you?

  • Norway.

    The only ones using cash here are the elderly, immigrant workers and contractors that skip VAT. Been like that a long time. A restaurant chain here stopped accepting cash (illegal), and there was barely some buzz in the media. Buzz so brief I don’t know how it ended.

  •  m016   ( @m016@lemmy.ca ) 
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    151 year ago

    I almost never have cash on me. It’s debit or credit always. Here’s my thought process on paying with cash. If I buy something that costs, say $4.55, and I hand over a $5 dollar bill, that item has really just cost me $5.00 because what am I realistically going to do with the 45 cents in change?

    •  Seathru   ( @Seathru@beehaw.org ) 
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      101 year ago

      I put my change in a jar when I empty my pockets. About once a year I’ll take it by the bank and treat myself with the couple hundred dollars it cashes out to.

      Are you just throwing yours away?

      •  m016   ( @m016@lemmy.ca ) 
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        31 year ago

        I’ve got a jar too, but it definitely doesn’t fill up at anywhere near the rate yours does. My pay is direct deposited and every place I shop will take a card. I could either go to the ATM to get cash, use it to pay for things when I don’t have to, collect these small amounts of change, and take it all back to the bank eventually, or I could just not bother with any of these things.

      •  weew   ( @weew@lemmy.ca ) 
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        1 year ago

        I’ve had like ~70 cents sitting on the shelf for over a year… like, what an I going to do with it? It’s just a pointless pile of coins. half the time those coins are in the wrong combination to pay for whatever other change in my next cash transaction, so I just end up with more coins… which I have to remember to grab when I’m specifically going to a cash-only place…

      • All of the sub-$1 coins that I have ever received as change in my lifetime would not add up to $100. But I also don’t use (or even carry) cash unless I absolutely must.

        Edit to add: I have a jar too. It’s a standard mason jar. I started filling this one after my last move. In 2013.

        I have yet to fill it completely.

      •  weew   ( @weew@lemmy.ca ) 
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        1 year ago

        the problem now is that I’ll just have a big pickle jar with 45 cents. Next year, I’ll have a pickle jar with 60 cents… maybe by the time I retire I’ll have a whole five dollars of change and exchange it for a bill…

  • Germany: Credit card most of the time, using Apple Pay.

    Some places only take girocard (formally EC), a special system in Germany that is cheaper for the vendor and more common, though some modern banks like N26 don’t give out girocards anymore which is why I have another bank account just for this. Super annoying.

    Sometimes cash is still the only option, which is why I always carry 20-30 Euros with me just in case. Examples would be the local farm shop where I buy eggs and veggies, some small restaurants and pubs.

  • Almost exclusively cash for groceries and outings. Most other things are ordered online anyway. You’d think that working in IT I’d be more progressive but I’m confronted with so much malfunctioning tech that I’d rather have a simple form of transaction I can rely on and keep track of easily. My bank probably has some sort of ancient database that nobody understands anymore since Larry who was maintaining it died of a heart attack two weeks before retirement and now nobody dares to touch it until it’ll eventually fail and cause my card to lose functionality for 3 days. I’ll stick with my coins.

  • US: Credit card only, almost exclusively using Apple Pay. If I somehow obtain cash, I deposit it so that I can spend it using a card instead and earn the rewards. I actively use about half a dozen cards, choosing the right one for each transaction to maximize rewards.