Quelle monnaie pour Bali?
by Gilles73210
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
nous partons avec mon épouse pour bali samedi prochain .
que doit on prendre comme liquidité afin de facilité le change à l'aéroport ? dollars US ou Euros
merci de votre réponse
le soleil se lève pour tous
Bonjour
Des euros feront l affaire 😉 et une CB , change que le minimum a l aéroport (pas le meilleur taux) A bali tu fais le change dans les moneys changers alors tu compares bien les taux et surtout tu recomptes plutot deux fois qu une le montant qu ils te donnent (de toute façon ils essayerons de t arnaquer dans la plupart des cas 🤪 ) Bon voyage
Des euros feront l affaire 😉 et une CB , change que le minimum a l aéroport (pas le meilleur taux) A bali tu fais le change dans les moneys changers alors tu compares bien les taux et surtout tu recomptes plutot deux fois qu une le montant qu ils te donnent (de toute façon ils essayerons de t arnaquer dans la plupart des cas 🤪 ) Bon voyage
Je vis la nuit car on ma dit que j'allais mourir un jour
(de toute façon ils essayerons de t arnaquer dans la
plupart des cas 🤪 )
Qu'on arrête de toujours dire ça ! Aucune tentative d'arnaque en 3 semaines sur Bali....
Qu'on arrête de toujours dire ça ! Aucune tentative d'arnaque en 3 semaines sur Bali....
Florence - Le monde est un village... - Vivre simplement pour que d'autres, simplement, puissent vivre-Gandhi
Carnets de voyage sur le site de VF : "Deux semaines dans le sud du Laos", "Laos 2009 : Vientiane, Luang Prabang et Vang Vieng" et "2 semaines de Yangon à Mawlamyine en novembre 2015".
tu veux faire un sondage?😎
(Pour moi il y a pas plus con q un balinais qui te prend pour un con 😊)
C est bien beau d afficher un super taux de change si c est pour te passer des billets de
10 000 pour des billets de 100 000 !!!😛
DONC CHECK BIEN TON CHANGE A BALI 😎
Je vis la nuit car on ma dit que j'allais mourir un jour
salut
Camelark a raison sur les 2 points qui donne:
*ne change que le minimum à ton arrivée le taux n'est pas super dans l'aéroport (ceci est valable partout dans le monde!)
*ne va pas dans les bureaux de change qui affichent des taux Très intéressants- ils te collent des frais prohibitifs ....dans la rue sur le trottoir -il peut parfois en manquer!!!
va plutôt à la BMC y-en a à peu prés partout... vérifies et comptes dans le lieu ou tu changes tes billets ça ne posera aucun problème: - le temps n'existe pas en Indonésie!!! il faut des fois vérifier les billets ( dans les petits commerces ) car des petits malins te refilent des billets qui n'ont plus cours actuellement...
dans la tête des indos : nous ne sommes que de stupides étrangers! tous les indos ne pensent pas comme ça mais nos cultures sont tellement différentes que ce qui pour nous est important ne l'est pas pour eux et vice-versa...
me souviens d'une fois ou on faisait le plein dans une station: y-a toujours du personnel pour te servir on demande 100mil d'essence ... 1 gars sers l'essence pendant qu'un autre se positionne devant le compteur du distributeur...2 minutes ce passe : sudah bapak selamat sore.( c'est fait Monsieur bonne après midi)..je demande à voir le compteur il affichait 50mil ...l'indo est mort de rire... (quand ils font des conneries ils rigolent et plus la connerie est grosse plus ils rigolent)
maaf bapak saya lupa (désolé monsieur j'ai pas fait attention/ j'ai oublié) depuis je ne donne l'argent que quant le service est terminé et que je peux vérifier... c'est pas très méchant mais ça peut "énerver" certains après quand on les connait un eu on fait gaffe mais ils arrivent toujours à surprendre !
mais bon no stress c'est pas non plus à chaque seconde comme ça ... y-en a toujours qui croient au Karma!!!!
bon voyage
Camelark a raison sur les 2 points qui donne:
*ne change que le minimum à ton arrivée le taux n'est pas super dans l'aéroport (ceci est valable partout dans le monde!)
*ne va pas dans les bureaux de change qui affichent des taux Très intéressants- ils te collent des frais prohibitifs ....dans la rue sur le trottoir -il peut parfois en manquer!!!
va plutôt à la BMC y-en a à peu prés partout... vérifies et comptes dans le lieu ou tu changes tes billets ça ne posera aucun problème: - le temps n'existe pas en Indonésie!!! il faut des fois vérifier les billets ( dans les petits commerces ) car des petits malins te refilent des billets qui n'ont plus cours actuellement...
dans la tête des indos : nous ne sommes que de stupides étrangers! tous les indos ne pensent pas comme ça mais nos cultures sont tellement différentes que ce qui pour nous est important ne l'est pas pour eux et vice-versa...
me souviens d'une fois ou on faisait le plein dans une station: y-a toujours du personnel pour te servir on demande 100mil d'essence ... 1 gars sers l'essence pendant qu'un autre se positionne devant le compteur du distributeur...2 minutes ce passe : sudah bapak selamat sore.( c'est fait Monsieur bonne après midi)..je demande à voir le compteur il affichait 50mil ...l'indo est mort de rire... (quand ils font des conneries ils rigolent et plus la connerie est grosse plus ils rigolent)
maaf bapak saya lupa (désolé monsieur j'ai pas fait attention/ j'ai oublié) depuis je ne donne l'argent que quant le service est terminé et que je peux vérifier... c'est pas très méchant mais ça peut "énerver" certains après quand on les connait un eu on fait gaffe mais ils arrivent toujours à surprendre !
mais bon no stress c'est pas non plus à chaque seconde comme ça ... y-en a toujours qui croient au Karma!!!!
bon voyage
aum sawastiastu
De mon point de vue, la solution la plus sûre et la plus économique c'est de prendre le minimum de liquide (disons 50€ par personne) et de retirer de l'argent aux distributeurs avec sa CB au fur & à mesure des besoins.
Même avec la commission abracadabrantesque facturée par les banques lors des retraits hors zone € (amis voleurs bonjour), ça revient moins cher que de changer du liquide, sous reserve que vous ne retiriez pas 50,000rp tous les jours evidemment ...
Il faut juste faire attention où vous aller : il y a des coins sans distributeurs de billets (région d'Amed, Permuteran, ...) ou il vous faudra faire quelques dizaines de kilomètres avant de trouver un distributeur.
Vous pourrez toujours demander à votre hôtel ou chauffeur de vous confirmer qu'il y a bien un distributeur là où vous allez mais attention ... les Balinais (et les asiatiques en général) on tendance à répondre "yes yes no problem" alors qu'ils n'ont même pas compris ce que vous leur demandez. On fini par s'y faire et rester zen malgré que ça nous fasse perdre du temps quand on vit sur place mais les touristes n'ont souvent pas le temps d'acquérir cette zenitude ...
Bref si un Balinais vous regarde avec des gros yeux, hésite et fini par vous répondre "yes yes no problem" c'est souvent un signe avant-coureur que vous allez finir par avoir une surprise ! :)
Même avec la commission abracadabrantesque facturée par les banques lors des retraits hors zone € (amis voleurs bonjour), ça revient moins cher que de changer du liquide, sous reserve que vous ne retiriez pas 50,000rp tous les jours evidemment ...
Il faut juste faire attention où vous aller : il y a des coins sans distributeurs de billets (région d'Amed, Permuteran, ...) ou il vous faudra faire quelques dizaines de kilomètres avant de trouver un distributeur.
Vous pourrez toujours demander à votre hôtel ou chauffeur de vous confirmer qu'il y a bien un distributeur là où vous allez mais attention ... les Balinais (et les asiatiques en général) on tendance à répondre "yes yes no problem" alors qu'ils n'ont même pas compris ce que vous leur demandez. On fini par s'y faire et rester zen malgré que ça nous fasse perdre du temps quand on vit sur place mais les touristes n'ont souvent pas le temps d'acquérir cette zenitude ...
Bref si un Balinais vous regarde avec des gros yeux, hésite et fini par vous répondre "yes yes no problem" c'est souvent un signe avant-coureur que vous allez finir par avoir une surprise ! :)
Bonjour, je pars avec ma pote pour Bali en avril. Hors hébergements, combien il faut compter sur place en se faisant plaisir quand même?
Aurore
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1) The first day she spent in the Schengen Area was January 21st. That day will drop out of the calculation 180 days later, on July 20th.
From July 20th, she’ll get back 1 day of possible stay; on July 22nd, 2 days; and so on. All the days from her previous stay (January 21st–April 16th) need to be outside the 180-day rolling window. The last day of her stay was April 16th. Looking 180 days ahead, that brings us to October 13th. From that date, she’ll be able to return for a full 90 days. 2) The number of allowed days is calculated for each day of the new stay. In other words: the 180-day window is recalculated every day, not fixed at the entry date. If she re-enters France on July 18th, she’ll only have a “credit” of 4 days. But with each day of her new stay, one day from the previous stay (January–April) will drop out of the calculation. The rolling window allows her to “replace” days from the previous stay with those of the new stay, without ever exceeding 90 days in any 180-day period. In this case, my partner could stay in France for 90 days starting on July 18th. The Prefecture doesn’t provide any information, nor does Air France, and in the forums I’ve checked, opinions are divided. Thanks for any insights you can share!
She plans to return to France on July 18th. According to the European Commission’s Schengen calculator, this new stay “may be authorized for a maximum of 90 days.” That’s not very clear ("may be," "for a maximum of").
The text of Article 6 of the European regulation (2016/399) states that for a stay planned in the territory of the Member States, not exceeding 90 days in any 180-day period, one must examine "the 180-day period preceding each day of the stay." That’s not very clear either.
My partner wants to return to France for a 90-day period starting on July 18th. Is this possible?
There are two ways to look at it:
1) The first day she spent in the Schengen Area was January 21st. That day will drop out of the calculation 180 days later, on July 20th.
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Hi there,
I’m leaving for Japan in a few weeks. I just noticed my passport has an ink stain on the signature page. Could this cause any issues?
I’m leaving for Japan in a few weeks. I just noticed my passport has an ink stain on the signature page. Could this cause any issues?
Hello, HAPPY NEW YEAR 2026!
We’re heading back in October for a trip through Botswana, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
I have a question: for our route, we’ll need to cross the Zambia and Zimbabwe borders twice each. From experience, I know we won’t have any issues with Botswana.
But for the other two countries, I can’t find a clear answer.
All your tips are welcome!
Thanks for your replies
Thanks for your replies
Hi everyone!
I’m currently a student on a gap year, and I don’t plan to go back to school right away. That said, traveling really interests me. But I’ve been wondering: does being a student come with any perks when you decide to go abroad? The real question is whether I should re-enroll in a program just to keep that status without actually attending.
Thanks in advance for your replies,
Axel
I’m currently a student on a gap year, and I don’t plan to go back to school right away. That said, traveling really interests me. But I’ve been wondering: does being a student come with any perks when you decide to go abroad? The real question is whether I should re-enroll in a program just to keep that status without actually attending.
Thanks in advance for your replies,
Axel
hi everyone,
I’m French and live in France, and my Thai girlfriend just told me she’s pregnant—she lives in Thailand. First step, a paternity test to set my mind at ease. What steps do I need to take to recognize the child? Can I do it before the birth or only after? Where do I need to go, and what paperwork is required?
Just to clarify, I want him to stay in Thailand but be able to come to France anytime without any issues! Thanks for taking the time to read and reply.
Just to clarify, I want him to stay in Thailand but be able to come to France anytime without any issues! Thanks for taking the time to read and reply.




