Ask ten experienced backpackers how they handle money across borders and eight will say "Wise" before you've finished the question. That kind of consensus is either a genuinely good product or very good marketing — so here's the honest review: what Wise actually does well for an Australian working holiday, what it costs, and the places where it isn't the right tool.

What Wise is (and isn't)

Wise is a multi-currency account with a debit card and a transfer service. It is not a bank — no branches, no credit, and it's regulated as a money-services provider rather than under bank deposit-guarantee schemes. What it does instead is one thing brilliantly: moving and spending money across currencies at the mid-market rate — the real rate from Google — with a small, visible fee instead of a hidden rate markup.

For a backpacker, that translates into three concrete superpowers:

  1. Cheap transfers. Send your savings from home to Australia (and your earnings back later) at the real rate, with the fee shown before you confirm.
  2. Local AUD account details. Wise gives you an Australian BSB and account number, so an employer can pay your wages into it like any local account — plus local details in other major currencies (GBP, EUR, USD and more).
  3. The card. A debit card that spends from whatever currency you hold, auto-converting at the mid-market rate when needed.

The fees, in plain numbers

  • Conversions/transfers: typically a fraction of a percent, varying by currency pair — shown upfront, every time. On most routes it lands dramatically below a bank's 2–5% hidden markup.
  • Holding money and receiving local-currency payments: free.
  • ATM withdrawals: free up to a monthly allowance (a couple of withdrawals / a few hundred dollars), then a small per-withdrawal and percentage fee. The play: fewer, larger withdrawals — though Australia is so card-friendly you'll barely need cash anyway.
  • Card spending in a currency you hold: free. Spending AUD from your AUD balance costs nothing.

No monthly fees, no minimums. The pricing model's whole personality is "you can see it".

Checking exchange rates and transfer fees in a banking app while budgeting

Where it genuinely shines on a working holiday

  • Landing week. You arrive with a working card and AUD ready, immune to airport exchange counters, before you've had time to open a local bank account.
  • Getting paid without a local bank. The BSB + account number means wages can flow from day one.
  • The departure. This is the killer feature nobody appreciates until the end: after you leave, your final pay, rental bond, tax refund and superannuation (DASP) all need an Australian account to land in — and then need converting home. Wise handles both halves without you being in the country.
  • Multi-country trips. Bali stopover, New Zealand side trip, the flight home via Asia — one card, correct rate everywhere.

Where it falls short

Honesty section. Wise is not the whole answer:

  • It's not a bank account. Some Australian landlords, utilities and odd corners of officialdom prefer a traditional local bank. Most backpackers still open one — it's free and easy — and run Wise alongside it.
  • No deposit guarantee. Client funds are safeguarded, but it's not the same as a government bank guarantee. Don't treat it as the vault for your life savings long-term.
  • Cash deposits are basically not a thing. Paid cash-in-hand from a market stall? You'll need that local bank to bank it.
  • Fees exist. Wise is cheap, not free. On some exotic currency routes, the percentage climbs — check the quote each time.
  • Support is app-based. Fine 99% of the time; occasionally you'll wish for a branch and a human.

The right mental model: Wise for everything that crosses a border, a local Australian bank for everything that doesn't. Run both and neither will ever cost you real money.

Wise vs the banks, scoreboard style

WiseTypical bank
Exchange rateMid-market, alwaysMarked up 2–5%
Fee transparencyShown before you sendBuried in the rate
AUD account detailsYesYes
Multi-currency holding40+ currenciesRarely
Branches / cashNoYes
Best forCross-border everythingLocal everyday banking

Verdict

For an Australian working holiday, Wise is about as close to a no-brainer as financial products get: free to open, no ongoing costs, and it removes the single biggest hidden expense of travelling — bad exchange rates — at the exact moments (arrival and departure) when the sums are largest. Set it up before you fly, order the card early so it arrives in time, and pair it with a local bank account once you land. Wise (multi-currency account)

Rates and fee structures shift over time, so check the live quote in the app for your specific currencies — but the core promise, the real rate with the fee in plain sight, is exactly what a backpacker's money needs.

les outils qu'on kiffe pour ça

Money / FXWise (multi-currency account)

Hold AUD, spend at the real exchange rate, dodge bank fees.

Open a Wise account