RetireJapan wrote: ↑Thu Feb 03, 2022 3:54 am
Yeah, this hit my wife's business as she runs the STEP Eiken test and Eiken insists we pay them via the post office so we get hit with this (and Eiken refuses to cover the cost). Pretty annoying.
OMG, sorry to hear that. We do the Aiken test too.The banks/post office seem to run the money system like its own little mafia,system.
Pay us to look after your money, and we'll pay you nothing in return. And don't take all the money out as that incurs another charge. Shocking really.
Haystack wrote: ↑Thu Feb 03, 2022 4:39 am
Perhaps charging a suica/Pasmo with your extra coins might be a good workaround?
I assume more of this is to come at all banks. My wife has a Mizuho account and sent me some funds around 4:30pm. 330 yen charge...
I read this somewhere, and its helpful, but putting all those coins away for the kids was really useful.
I also don't use Suica or Pasmo..what are they? I'm not a fan of digital money as the research shows your more likely to spend 10% more than if you used cash. because the actual physical withdrawal of money from your wallet, causes psychological pain. ( not literally) but it causes us to pause. I think this is why credit cards are so nasty.Its painless.
Butterball wrote: ↑Thu Feb 03, 2022 5:59 am
That's pretty ridiculous.
I used to spend a while each month feeding the MUFG ATM my coins (you can only do 100 at a time, and it takes a LONG time to count each batch them) but now, the best way to get rid of coins is shopping at places that use those automatic cash-receiving machines. Just throw a pocketful of coins in every time you buy something. It will take your mishmash of random low-value coins and give you your change back in higher-denomination coins (and bills, if your change due is over Y1000).
Exactly. Thank god the women came to me as said I don't need to count them. Just dump them in the machine, it'll take 100 coins and return the rest. Then just rinse and repeat.
I shall be strong, defiant, brave...and take a stand or a knee.....at the ATM, because " COINS MATTER".
I might have to discriminate and start putting every 1000 yen I get in the can now.
beanhead wrote: ↑Thu Feb 03, 2022 7:43 am
I heard that if you put coins into the machine at a JR station for an expensive ticket, then cancel the transaction, you get notes back instead of your coins. Not sure if this actually works or not.
It certainly doesn't help with teaching the kids the value of saving your pennies, obviously.
I was a 500yen going collector for years. Very lucrative.
Over the past few years with Paypay and Suica etc I almost never use cash now, let alone coins...
I still am. I have three cans. 500 yen, 100/50 yens, and the shrapnel can. They sure get really heavy, and it has paid for our flights a few times over.
You said you use digital money now.... would you say that's impacted on your savings. I'm asking because you mentioned you "were" a 500 yen collector and it "was very lucrative?"
As I mentioned the research shows digital shoppers spend more than cash shoppers.
Any thoughts?

Pitty we couldn't start a bank called the 1 coin bank. pop your money in our bank for free and well let you take it out...for free after a year. After we've made our profit of course.

Baldrick. Trying to save the world.