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maribi
1 year ago

If you don’t have a chance with your bank, you could see if you know someone with an account with Commerzbank or Comdirect. You can also pay coin money to the Commerzbank payment machines. As a Comdirect customer 3 times/year free, as Commerzbank customer always free.

Or you exchange it for shopping vouchers/Bon to the machines that are often in the Rewe markets.

ellaluise
1 year ago

Well, I didn’t want to, and with my bank, only 50 coins are free. So I packed 2-3 little Portemonaies, again and again, and every time I wanted to go to the bank/ came I paid 50 coins. Lasted over 1 year, even because I didn’t go to the bank regularly and extra and if I had forgotten to pack a “pack” no matter.

Now depends on your bank’s fee model, with us is 51. Mint 0.5Ct/ coin the fee. So 50% of a 1 cent coin, not with me.

cafibone
1 year ago
Reply to  ellaluise

My savings bank in the Land of Brandenburg: calculated once per deposit regardless of the total value 5 EUR. I thought it was okay. The service had to empty the hard money compartment forever and once, but after about 20 minutes it was done and the 1200 euros in the account (extra cash for holiday – collected over a year in large milk bucket). I always raise the paper and the newspapers / advertisements, bundle the paper and bring it once a month to the paper purchase/paper exchange (usually a trunk full). These are every time around EUR 15 – 20 (paper and cardboard purchase prices have been gradually increased. The money then always comes into the milk can for vacation.

cafibone
1 year ago

I am with the savings bank and can exchange any amount of money for five euros (hard money machine). This is credited to the account. Since I collect the small money from the pants pockets over the year, the five Euro fees do not fall into weight. Maybe a buddy has an account with the Sparkasse and can do this for you.

einandereruser
1 year ago

It works with us as every year. The deposit machine is in the front of the bank. You know the rest.

How with you looks, no one can say as long as you don’t specifically ask people in your environment.

possim
1 year ago

You go to the Bundesbank and exchange the coin money in notes or other/larger coins. The Bundesbank is here for that!

csor77
1 year ago

Without fees, probably almost nowhere.

maribi
1 year ago
Reply to  csor77

Come on to the bank. For example, the Commerzbank has no problem.

csor77
1 year ago
Reply to  maribi

The problem will be that you have to be the customer of the Comerzbank, right? 🙂

possim
1 year ago
Reply to  csor77

Yes, at the Bundesbank.

maribi
1 year ago

Jo, or someone who has a Commerzbank or Comdirect account 😉

iF3lix
1 year ago

If you’re at a savings bank, you can usually pay the coin money over the “Münz-Safebags”.

maribi
1 year ago
Reply to  iF3lix

But usually not free of charge