Does your choice depends on somehing? And from what country are you?
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?
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?
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.
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.
Back in the day you take that .45 cents and throw it in a big old empty pickle jar with the rest of your loose change.
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…
Sure. At the current rate. But it’s likely that if you use cash more often then your pickle jar fills up sooner.
The amount of cash I use is only decreasing with every year. I’m not going to further inconvenience myself just to validate a pickle jar.
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.
I can’t even remember the last time I had cash in my wallet
Credit card for the rewards, paid monthly. Keep cash for tipping and small stuff.
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.
While its solid you’re into the efficiency of it all, as an outsider it seems like an added headache to remember which card would be best for which outlet / type of transaction. I personally just maintain a few cards and only switch once I’ve reached about 50-60% the limit.
Cash, because I try to keep at least some privacy.
Cash. feels better + Banks cant track me
Banks also seem willing to share their data with government agencies.
I always pay with credit card whenever I can for the rewards, then pay it off fully.
cash is printed freedom
Card whenever possible. Faster and more secure in almost every aspect.
Germany
Could be a Berlin thing, but I found it so weird when I was there in early 2020 that most places didn’t accept card.
Cash and only cash. I live in Europe, so basocally wherever I decide to travel, my euros will be accepted, otherwise I’d rather get ripped off by an exchange than give a single piece of metadata to my bank :)
Travelling to places with a different currency outside the EU, I take my debit card and on the very first day withdraw some of the local currency from an ATM.
I live in the eurozone, and I don’t even know what euro cash looks like.
cash. i don’t buy much because i can’t afford to, and what i do is purchased in a real store.
not even well fargo or boa would make a fake account using my data.
Card. Gotta get that cash back.
Do people still carry cash these days? Maybe if I was going to a garage sale or some private transaction… but even for those it’s more convenient to do an e-transfer. Some businesses don’t even have cash registers any more, just a card reader.
I sometimes carry cash. I’ll say one thing, paying with cash makes it easier to avoid the tipping creep problem we’re seeing at U.S. businesses that have traditionally not had tipping.
Almost everyone uses their card or phone here in Sweden. A lot of places stopped accepting cash.