I am traveling around Europe for a few months and wondering if this is possible and if anyone had done it. EU or Eastern Europe maybe would be ok too.
I supposed it but wanted to ask anyways. Maybe I will open a company in Romania, not sure yet thoAlmost impossible. If it is for a company, Multipass may open it.
I am traveling around Europe for a few months and wondering if this is possible and if anyone had done it. EU or Eastern Europe maybe would be ok too.
Try Verifo (a Lithuanian EMI). I guess it can work. Or maybe Paysera (also LT EMI) but there I'm not sure.Paraguay residency, latam passport. Just to have it maybe send less than 10k a month some months maybe nothing.
IMO – generally, banks will be more reluctant than (some) EMIs. Maybe some bank in Montenegro but their fees are horrible. Or perhaps in Serbia. Nevertheless, an EMI will serve you well – if you success to onboard.There are definitely banks who open personal accounts for non-citizens/residents, as long as you provide your country's tax ID. I'm not sure if Paraguay is on their whitelist though, you just need to shop around and ask (ask the banks, not the forum). They have lists of countries that are low and high risk and I'm sure where Paraguay stands.
You have come to the right place!I am traveling around Europe for a few months and wondering if this is possible and if anyone had done it. EU or Eastern Europe maybe would be ok too.
You have come to the right place!
Yes, you can! I'm going to go out on a limb here and "assume" you speak Spanish fluently, right? If affirmative, keep reading:
Santander, is your first link: ¿Puede un extranjero no residente en España abrir una cuenta bancaria?
Cuenta Mundo para no residentes
is your next link: Cuenta Mundo para No Residentes
This can be done with other banks in Spain, especially if your Spanish is fluent. Make sure you keep in touch with your account executive. Grab their business card and email. If they have a mobile number, grab that too. Stay in touch with your bank contacts at least once per month with one "¡Buen día! Te deseo una maravillosa semana libre de estrés." on a European Monday morning before the bank opens
Try to deposit at least €1000 cash with each account opening. If you want a debit card, you must have an address in Spain. Preferably, a friend's address. If you want to be fancy, you can get an address here: Home
Do NOT! I repeat, do NOT have the bank ship your debit card to Paraguay! The Aduana at Aeropuerto Internacional Silvio Pettirossi will go ape sh1t if a debit card or credit card arrives for a resident in Paraguay!
Good luck and success!
PS. No. I'm NOT Spanish or even from the South of Europe. Moreover, Spanish is NOT even close to my native language. I learned Spanish through "immersion" i.e., I dated a LOT of Latinas in the 80s, 90s, and 2000s.
Santander is the friendlier with foreigners, BBVA and Bankinter also opens to foreigners but they will make more questions once you visit one of their branches. I suggest trying in branches located in well defined banking zones, don't try with branches on small towns because they won't accept it mostly by not being aware it's possiblewhich other banks beside Santander , have you experience ?
Good point. It does not depend on whether you are in Europe or not, in fact. So you can try Dukascopy, too – for balances under 50k it's OK.
Is Paraguay on some sort of undesirable "list"???None of the "banks" you listed work for a resident of Paraguay.
I don't think so, Paraguay doesn't even exist (latam joke)Is Paraguay on some sort of undesirable "list"???
Is Paraguay on some sort of undesirable "list"???
Stay in touch with your bank contacts at least once per month with one "¡Buen día! Te deseo una maravillosa semana libre de estrés." on a European Monday morning before the bank opens
Romania ING... (do in bucharest) ro + eurI am traveling around Europe for a few months and wondering if this is possible and if anyone had done it. EU or Eastern Europe maybe would be ok too.