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    <title>Dažādas piezīmes ATM's in Korea</title>
    <link>https://tvertne.org/blogi/?itemid=2094</link>
    <description>ATM are ubiquitous, but most Korean ATMs don't accept foreign cards, only special Global ATMs
do. These can be found at airports and some subway stations in major
cities, as well as in many Family..</description>
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        <title>ATM's in Korea</title>
        <link>https://tvertne.org/blogi/?itemid=2094</link>
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<title>Dažādas piezīmes ATM's in Korea</title>
<link>https://tvertne.org/blogi/?itemid=2094</link>
<description>ATM are ubiquitous, but <span style="color: rgb(51, 204, 0);">most Korean ATMs don't accept foreign cards</span>, only special <b>Global ATM</b>s
do. These can be found at airports and some subway stations in major
cities, as well as in many Family Mart convenience stores, so stock up
before heading to the countryside. <b>Credit card</b> acceptance, on
the other hand, is very good, and all but the very cheapest restaurants
and motels will take Visa and Mastercard. (It is illegal to refuse
credit cards unless it's a very small shop).<br /><br />http://wikitravel.org/en/South_Korea<br />http://wikitravel.org/en/Seoul<br /><span class="mw-headline"><b><br /></b>Costs:</span><br />Korea is fairly expensive for an Asian country, if still notably
cheaper than Japan. A frugal backpacker willing to eat, live and travel
Korean-style can squeeze by on under ￦60,000 per day (~30Ls), but if you want
top-class hotels and Western food even ￦200,000/day will not suffice. (~95Ls)<br /><br />http://finance.yahoo.com/currency?u<br /><br /><br />
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