The
only thing we needed cash for in England was to drop in the collection buckets
of street performers. Everything else, tap a card or tap your phone with
Apple Pay (or Google Pay). Lots of places wouldn’t even accept
cash. No minimum, nobody complaining if you tapped for something that
only cost a pound or two. Oh wait. Toilets. The public
toilets in the middle of town that were not at a public facility like a train
station or Underground, cost 20 pence. Shortly after we discovered that
there was a charge for random restrooms and we had to have a few coins in our
pockets, we discovered that there is a tradition of pubs offering their toilets
for free to anyone that needs them. No resistance, just a friendly
welcome to anyone wandering in from the street. There is a pub close by
in practically every neighborhood.
Restaurants.
Food carts on the street. On and off trains, buses, and the
Underground. No cash changes hands. No throwing money at the
turnstile. No handing cash to an attendant. Tap at the turnstile on
your way into the underground, tap on your way out, and it figures out how much
to charge you. Train tickets away from London you have to buy a ticket,
but you can do that on your phone with a click. It’s like boarding passes
at the airport, just show the ticket on your phone to the attendant and you’re
good to go.
No
converting dollars to pounds when we arrived. No scrambling to try to get
leftover pounds converted back to dollars before we left. For such an old
country, they sure are modern with their payment systems.
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