1. Five major state-owned banks: China Industrial and Commercial Bank, China Construction Bank, China Bank, China Agricultural Bank and Bank of Communications, all opened foreign currency exchange business;
2. Secondly, some joint-stock banks (such as China Merchants Bank, China CITIC Bank, Industrial Bank and Shanghai Pudong Development Bank) also provide this service;
3. In addition, most foreign banks (HSBC, Standard Chartered Bank, etc. ) you can also exchange foreign currency.
Bring your personal ID card to a bank that can handle foreign exchange business and fill in relevant documents. There is a limit to the quantity. (Not exceeding $2,000 per day)
To exchange foreign currency within the limit, domestic individuals carry resident identity cards, and overseas individuals carry passports, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan residents' passes to and from the Mainland and other valid identity documents to the bank. If it exceeds the exchange limit, it is also necessary to provide relevant certification materials for the transaction amount.
Foreign currency exchange skills:
(1) Just change it one or two weeks in advance.
(2) You need to make an appointment in advance to go to the bank. At present, foreign exchange control is strict, and almost all banks do not have rich foreign currency. Remember to make an appointment in advance.
(3) Large overseas consumption is best paid by credit card.
(4) Don't change too much foreign currency. According to the regulations of China Customs, everyone who carries more than 20,000 RMB or the equivalent of 5,000 US dollars must declare to the Customs.
Extended data:
Different currencies have different exchange ranges.
A freely convertible foreign currency can be freely converted into other currencies without restriction.
Limited convertible foreign currencies can only be exchanged under certain conditions, such as only a certain number of people can exchange them, or the amount of exchange is limited.
Non-convertible foreign currencies are not allowed to be converted into other currencies, or can only be converted into other currencies through special permission.
Foreign currency is divided into narrow sense and broad sense, which refers to the currency of other countries or regions other than the domestic currency, including all kinds of banknotes and coins. Foreign currency in a broad sense refers to all payment vouchers expressed in foreign currency that can be used for international settlement.
In addition to foreign banknotes and coins, it also includes foreign securities held by enterprises, such as government bonds, government bonds, corporate bonds, stocks and dividends expressed in foreign currencies; It also includes foreign currency payment vouchers, such as bills expressed in foreign currency, bank deposit vouchers, postal savings vouchers, etc., and other foreign currency funds, such as various foreign currency remittances, foreign currency payment in import and export trade, etc. Its meaning is consistent with the static meaning of foreign exchange.