
The Alps is my all-time favourite summer holiday. Here's where to stay
Everybody has a favourite place for a summer holiday but it's not in the nature of a travel writer to be so partisan. Well, OK, maybe I'll spill the beans just this once. My ideal choice is the Alps, even if it's a more typical go-to for a goggle tan rather than full body bronze. I visit at least half a dozen times a year, having married an actual Heidi from Herisau in Switzerland. And with family in Zurich and my in-laws living under the crinkle-cut tops of the Appenzell Alps, I've seen first-hand how the summer season is changing.
When I started visiting in the warmest months 25 years ago, holidays across the Alps were for calm loneliness, walking, exploring up and over summits. Trails were empty, chalet inns open-armed yet quiet. Now there's been an explosion of fantasy hotels, with pools and spas, everywhere from A to Z (that's from Annecy in France to the Zillertal in Austria), all spurred on by tourists shifting their gaze north from the broiling Mediterranean. You can't read the news in summer any more without being confronted by stories about unprecedented heat or extreme weather events such as wildfires in Greece, southern Italy, Spain and Portugal. Refreshingly, temperatures where I often holiday in Switzerland and Austria rise agreeably into the high 20s.
For the Alps, this progress is also a feeling. Alongside all the clever new hotels are organic restaurants, mind-boggling activities and an optimistic sense that there's a lot more to be shared in the coming years. The drawback is that holidays are pricier than those in the Costas or Canaries, but the upside of the seesaw is exhilarating. Mountains seemingly drawn by children. Lakes bluer than a perfect sky. Cheese and chocolate growing on trees. Well, almost. And you don't even need to like The Sound of Music to go (though, I'll admit, it probably helps).
The places I've suggested for this summer are an uplifting mixture for couples, foodies, families and adults only in France, Austria, Switzerland and northern Italy. Some are classic, some are new. Regardless of what takes your fancy, though, all will quicken your pulse and make you bellow out yodel-ay-ee-oooo, giddily. Perhaps I'll even hear you while I'm there.
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The karst mountain views at this 400-year-old family farm hotel near Salzburg have slipped into something even more dreamlike since the arrival of the forest spa a couple of years ago. It's not a place for strutting around in skimpy swimwear but rather for cold dips in the natural lake, breathing deep in the herbal saunas or lazing on a paddleboard. My favourite pastime is simply bobbing in awe while watching the mountain light shift. What's more, there's every sort of thrill to chase in the surrounding mountains, plus an equal number of activities at the hotel. So if tennis isn't your thing, there's a riding school, art studio and children's farm.Details Half-board doubles from £539, including some extra meals (forsthofgut.at). Fly to Salzburg
Nowhere does family hotels like Austria. Child-friendly 'Kinderhotels' are a way of life and, having stayed at a number of them, I'm choosing this 123-bedroom property near St Anton because it feels like a mini theme park. The crèche-like lobby is fitted with a jungle gym, while there is also trampolining, soft play, an indoor basketball court and a cinema room, plus staff as smiley as a kids' party entertainer. Outdoors there's a pool with rapid-fire water slides and a squiggly Rodelbahn (Alpine rollercoaster), delivering bumps and wild hairpin bends. The snag, if there is one, is that you can only stay with children. But as parents you will go from feeling stressed to unwound, as your children vanish for hours at a time. No wonder there are so many repeat guests.Details Half-board doubles from £365, including some extra meals. Fly to Innsbruck
It's to the Wilder Kaiser massif that many Brits scramble in winter to ski in Kitzbühel, Söll or Ellmau but my money's on a summer stay at this centuries-old organic farm. Factor in diversions ranging from a Lipizzaner stud farm to a children's ranch, and it's like staying with Old MacDonald — albeit without the ee-eye-ee-eye-oh. You're also here for all sorts of cheese and air-dried meats from the surrounding fields and frothy steins of beer served, happily, in what was once the farm's hay and grain store.Details B&B doubles from £399 (stanglwirt.com). Fly to Innsbruck
• Read our full guide to Austria
When it comes to the Austrian Alps, my heart is in the Tyrol, in Austria's west. That's largely because it's where two worlds collide: the traditional Gemütlichkeit (good cheer) of schnitzel, gooey-cheese spätzle and sweet pancake kaiserschmarren, and the Vorsprung durch Technik of modernity through progressive architecture and smart design. At this rustic inn turned spa hotel, which I visited this year, there's a handsome amount of both, with the open-air infinity pools a magnificent construction of mountain design. All this would provide enough reason to book a stay but there's innovative architecture across its 70 rooms, a garden spa, plus a terrific tasting menu restaurant. My advice is to leave the kids at home.Details Half-board doubles from £297, including some extra meals. Fly to Innsbruck
Carinthia, on the border with Slovenia, is hardly Sound of Music territory. It's little-visited Austria but it still serves up all the gentle mountains, horizons of peaks and ice-clear lakes you'd want. You can eye plenty of that from this terrific series of panoramic multitiered chalets, with elevated sun terraces and — you've read this right — 11 pick-and-mix pools. My favourite is the infinity number with a view of what seems like all of southern Austria. For this summer, the hotel is unveiling several new mountain-framing rooms, giving you all the inspiration you need to climb every mountain. Just as if you were Julie Andrews.Details Half-board doubles from £209. Fly to Klagenfurt
The locals will tell you that little Alpbach, near Innsbruck, is Austria's most beautiful village due to its wall-to-wall timbered chalets, window-box geraniums and narrow streets. In the midst of this scene is this 500-year-old farm turned 73-room hotel, and it's uplifting in every sense, with sky-high balcony views, mountain cuisine and an elevated adults-only spa. When I stayed this year, I surely traumatised the other guests by wallowing, hippo-like, in its pool-with-a-view for hours.Details Half-board doubles from £325, including some extra meals. Fly to Innsbruck
It's little wonder the Dolomites in northeast Italy are having a moment. Overnight stays are rocketing because of the region's ridiculously pretty sawtooth peaks — and hotels like this one. In the shadow of the Haunold massif, the timber-clad property is a daydream of wood, soft textiles and natural light, with a newly renovated spa and outdoor pool. The eco vibe lends itself to the farm-centric restaurant and the distractions of getting out into those mountains. Be clear with yourself on this: regardless of your fitness (or how much ham you've snaffled), you'll have to hike to the dragon's-back-shaped Tre Cime di Lavaredo. It stalks the landscape like a monster.Details B&B doubles from £250. Fly to Bolzano
Even in bad weather, the Aosta Valley gives the Dolomites a run for its money. Instead of chipped-teeth mountain faces, this pocket of northwest Italy has the smoother cheekbones of the Monte Rosa massif and the clear-cut lines of Aethos Monterosa, an architectural hotel that looks as if it parachuted into the Ayas Valley from the Nordics. Inside, it's all pared-back rooms, organic textiles and floor-to-ceiling views, a rarity in an area where all other hotels are old-school three or four-star jobs. Though I don't have a head for heights, I'd recommend taking to the hotel's vast indoor climbing wall or splashing out on a scenic flight — the crumple-horned Matterhorn is just over the border.Details B&B doubles from £223. Fly to Turin
I met the Forestis Hotel's saintly co-owners, Teresa and Stefan Hinteregger, shortly after this party-piece property opened five years ago, and to say the couple have had an impact in the Dolomites would be a gross understatement — their 62-room hotel is now the one to which all others look in envy. Its most wonderful feature is the above-treetop view of the jagged Odle Group mountains and the hotel maximises this at every opportunity, from the shimmering stone pool to the theatre-type restaurant with raked seating and a forest cuisine menu. It's expensive but also an excuse to pursue what the popes who used to holiday in the area once sought: divine wellbeing and something close to enlightenment.Details B&B doubles from £619. Fly to Bolzano
In the past few years, to set itself apart, the Alta Badia region in the Dolomites has really pushed local Ladin cuisine and gourmet food experiences. The scenarios that rush to mind are hut-to-hut hiking, tasting mountain produce as you go, and an Alto Adige wine safari, after which you can reconvene in one of the farmhouses or taverns. Food is a big part of the story at the 20-room adults-only Hotel Recort, which opened last winter — it's all healthy, nature-to-plate dishes, while wine tastings are held in the cellar. The spa is no half-measure, either: consider a light-filled pool and Jacuzzi eyeing the bared teeth of the spiky Sella plateau.Details B&B doubles from £224. Fly to Bolzano
Another Falkensteiner? Hear me out. While this is another bells-and-whistles Kinderhotel in the Dolomites, I've never come across a place whose options for get-up-and-go families are so relentless. What's extraordinary is that its rooftop doesn't have a pool, like so many others, but a trampoline park and synthetic grass runway for year-round dry-slope skiing, basketball, football and toy car racing. There is a pool, of course, but also a private lake, beach and Europe's largest water slide. You'll have to gasp a lot because you don't book this 126-room hotel to rest but to wring every minute's worth out of your stay.Details B&B doubles from £210. Fly to Bolzano
The lakelands of Como and Garda are clearly the most lorded over in the Alpine foothills (read: trendiest, priciest, busiest) but the most blessed is Lake Orta. Away from the crowds, it's the one you could claim to be exclusively yours and this 11-room concept hotel in the pretty-as-pie village of Pella is a masterclass in design. Cue two villas (one ancient, one modern) and a medley of wood, stone, glass and chrome interplaying with the water. Then, in the middle of the lake, there's San Giulio island, the Alps' ultimate holy sanctuary and a smartphone-snap abbey if ever there was one.Details B&B doubles from £440. Fly to Milan
If you're wondering about the name then it's a plumed hat tip to the area's Salto, the largest larch plateau in Europe. That fills in the backstory to this tree-hugging nest 1,100m above Bolzano — and it's more affordable than many of its eco rivals. The look is all reclaimed larch and limestone, the sky-high infinity pool pokes above the treetops like a giant's footbath and the intent is to put nature's sparkle back into your soul. Food-wise, that means the sort of Alpine cuisine I love (hearty, hay-smoked veal washed down with apple cider, not teetotal veganism), and there's also hiking, horse riding and — get this — a hay sauna.Details B&B doubles from £262. Fly to Bolzano
• 10 of the most beautiful places in Italy
Many come with plans to get active in the Alps, nowhere more so than in the Jungfrau region in the Bernese Oberland. Cable car lines yo-yo up and down the steep valleys, and there's no better place to be sucker-punched by rock faces and glaciers with such little effort. When I hiked there last summer, I rode a train from Grindelwald up to a mountain saddle and stood on a glacier, watching summits crest like frothing waves. The most memorable place to collapse into bed afterwards is this fancy-pants design hotel, smack bang in the middle of the mountain action. It has a small spa, 90 sophisticated rooms and an Eiger-eyeballing terrace.Details Room-only doubles from £147. Fly to Basel
Zurich is for buttoned-down bankers and insurance brokers, so they say. Meh — that's so far from the truth. The city is hands down the most interesting in the Alps and I return for its Riviera-chic vibe every summer, a time when the collective obsession is with badis, the city's open-air public baths. Configured like a yacht club with rooms next to the finest of these (the wood-clad Seebad Utoquai, opened in 1890) is this 40-room stunner. You'll shake your head at the price but this is prime Zurich lakefront. For your money, you'll get rooms designed by Philippe Starck, the most appealing rooftop bar in Switzerland and a lakeside reflecting a city far more interesting than Geneva.Details Room-only doubles from £570. Fly to Zurich
This hideaway was bought as a family home a decade ago but the seven-room eyrie is now the perfect base camp from which to discover this underrated pocket south of Lake Geneva. And that family home feeling remains: in Saskia's restaurant, found in the former kitchen; in the well-thumbed books in the library; in the shoes-off atmosphere. All the good stuff is there too: wine from the Unesco-rated Lavaux vineyards, the medieval island castle at Chillon and the Montreux Jazz Festival, which runs for most of July.Details B&B doubles from £270. Fly to Geneva
If you know the trick to staying at this 007-endorsed mountaintop resort (Sean Connery stayed while filming Goldfinger), then you can use all its facilities, restaurants and private funicular for a fraction of the price. There are three very different hotels along the ridgeline of the razor-edged Bürgenstock mountain, but it's the 12-room Taverne 1879 you want for its more affordable, authentic Swiss chalet look. I'll be back this summer, largely to ride the mountain's other big-ticket attraction: the knee-knocking Hammetschwand, the highest outdoor lift in Europe.Details B&B doubles from £270. Fly to Zurich
Too bad for you that it'll all go so quickly at this once-in-a-lifetime château in a ridiculously pretty valley east of Lausanne. It's as expensive as the Swiss Alps gets, at the heart of its showiest village, but this is the sort of hotel you won't want to set foot out of during your stay. For foodies, there's a range of sublime Swiss and Japanese restaurants, plus a decorous whisky bar and terrace with a prime view of the Bernese Oberland's natural splendour. For relaxing, there's a Six Senses spa and magnificent pool, set in grand gardens. And for culture, there's modern art everywhere. In the pool last July I spent an entire afternoon splashing around, then watched sunset fall over a symphony of summits. You'll do the same.Details B&B doubles from £1,360. Fly to Basel
Mighty-fine Mürren might well be my ultimate Alpine village. From almost anywhere in this car-free refuge, accessible by the world's steepest gondola, it's possible to see a vivid portrait of many of Switzerland's most famous summits — Eiger, Monch and Jungfrau. That alone places the village on a footing with some of the world's greatest mountain towns but then there's more Bond history (see On Her Majesty's Secret Service, filmed in 1968) and the refurbishment of two golden age hotels. Drei Berge is reopening as a vegan concept hotel later this summer, so my money is on this 49-room grande dame, originally opened in 1874 and Switzerland's oldest palace hotel. There's a tip-top spa and living room restaurant serving an upmarket menu of quail, truffled rib-eye steak and Swiss salmon (yes, that's a thing).Details B&B doubles from £250. Fly to Basel
Arosa is rarely talked of in the same breath as Davos or St Moritz, but it's in the same mountain-riddled canton of Graubünden and has the same quintessential appeal. Bell-horned cows jingle-jangle on steep pastures, silver lakes sparkle and rollercoaster valleys make for a thrilling mountain biking break. My favourite place to stay is this end-of-the-road hideaway, with 94 elegant rooms, its own private mountain lift and eye-popping architecture: the spa is dramatically carved into the mountain, with glass sail windows symbolically mirroring the knife-edged mountains and sky.Details B&B doubles from £325. Fly to Zurich
I'd be mad to round up the most memorable Alpine stays and not include an option in Chamonix. It's a mesmeric place: the Aiguille du Midi mountain is an exclamation mark against the sky, Mont Blanc's glaciers flow down over wild cliffs, cable cars dangle and paragliders twirl. There are dozens of places to stay for hairy-chested climbers but I prefer the more chic La Folie Douce. The Alpine lifestyle brand is famous for uninhibited après-ski that marries cabaret with clubbing, and this belle époque hotel encourages the same sort of high Alpine hedonism in summer. Come for the pool and yoga, stay for the DJs and acrobats waltzing through the lobby.Details B&B doubles from £121 (lafoliedoucehotels.com). Fly to Geneva
• 10 of the best ski chalets in France
I can picture myself now: lolling in the panoramic pool, eyes stuffed with summits, then toddling upstairs to the library bar for fine grub and wine. Like all lovely French chalets, this has the rustic-chic, cowhide charm of a stopped-clock mountain refuge. The sleight of hand is that it's a modern 25-room newbuild. Most people come to this part of the Three Valleys in winter but therein lies the joy of summer: no skiers, no mushy snow and a fighting chance of a table at nearby La Bouitte, run by father-and-son team René and Maxime Meilleur — it's one of France's most extraordinary three-Michelin-star tables. Was it the best meal I've ever had in the Alps? I'll just tell you that I keep dreaming about the duck foie gras escalope and leave it at that.Details B&B doubles from £246. Fly to Chambery
For so many ski hotels, their summer life is a quiet one. That's the call of this 16-room refuge in a former cable car station at 2,551m, which makes it the highest hotel in France. You could well just check in for the views but there's also a panoramic restaurant, spa and 25m pool. Days are for hiking wildflower-trimmed ridges and evenings for gazing at the star-crammed skies. Admittedly, there's a hint of bias here: I once lived in Val d'Isère and, if anything, my stay at Le Refuge sorely tempted me to move back. I will one day.Details B&B doubles from £180. Fly to Chambéry
• Non-ski Val d'Isere: ice-floating, fat biking and a luxury spa hotel
No longer the domain of moneyed types such as the Rothschilds, Megève is the medieval French Alpine town of your mind's eye. It's all wood and stone chalets, albeit with an emphasis on slopeside luxury, but the best of these in summer is this traditional 12-room B&B with a pool, sauna and steam room. It's next to a working farm for that extra homespun feel, and there are all sorts of goodies, like whiffy fromage and garlicky saucisson to graze on after lungfuls of high Alpine air. For those who, like me, have summit gleams in their eyes, above you looms the Mont Blanc massif.Details B&B doubles from £255. Fly to Geneva
The Breton chef Yoann Conte is to Lake Annecy what Gordon Ramsay is to Knightsbridge. Conte is a give-it-all, down-to-earth cook, and his name on the door is the main draw at this 11-room chalet with a spa and lakefront terrace. The catch is that Alpine holidays are mostly meant for leaning into the landscape, not the larder, but the hotel's two restaurants unite the two terroirs of lake and mountain and are hard to bypass. Believe me, you won't forget dining at the two-Michelin-star La Table this summer, or any other.Details B&B doubles from £255 (yoann-conte.com). Fly to Geneva

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Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
He wants Disney World, I want the Maldives: The couples who can't agree over holidays
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'I can barely muster the enthusiasm to do the hours of research myself, even when I'm the one who wants to go away. I don't think he'd ever get around to it, especially when it's something he's not that keen on in the first place.' Early mornings vs lying in That's not the case for Claire Bartlett, 40, a business coaching strategist, and her husband Matthew, an insurance underwriter, also 40, from Birmingham. 'We've always had a bit of a holiday clash,' Claire admits. 'I get up early to watch the sunrise – I find it so peaceful and calming. But he'll say, 'I've had to get up for work all year; I'm lying in.' In the early days, I'd be shouting, 'Get up!' But now I just leave him to it.' Before they go away, Claire says, 'we try to agree how many days of the holiday we'll spend exploring. We head to Malta every year for some winter sun, and in summer we love going to Disney in Orlando.' That's where the problems begin. 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Telegraph
5 hours ago
- Telegraph
Why a cruise is the best way to see off-the-beaten-path Japan
When I told friends I was going on a cruise in Japan, the response was mostly bemusement. 'Isn't it better to take the train?' they'd ask. It's a fair question. Japan's high-speed rail network is one of the best in the world, and the journey I'd be making – from Tokyo to Kagoshima in Kyushu, the country's most southerly island – takes just under seven hours. The cruise ship would take three days. But the point here is to travel slowly, experiencing towns and destinations off the well-trodden tourist trail, and to enjoy the ship in between. Princess Cruises' Diamond Princess was the vessel I boarded in Tokyo. Built in Japan specifically for cruises around the country, it boasts a traditional izumi Japanese baths, a high-grade sushi restaurant (where Japanese chefs carve up fresh, local fish and seafood), and even Tai Chi classes held daily on the pool deck. 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Each number corresponds to a numbered wooden box, and inside it is a waka, written on a thin strip of paper. It is hoped that the poem's message, based on the traditional Shinto ethics, will have particular meaning for the reader. I was pleased to see my oracle telling of success in health, wealth, love and family matters – and especially delighted when it declared that my travels would be 'pleasing'. A promising omen. The following day – waka safely tucked into my luggage – I boarded the ship and we headed for Miyazaki, Japan's warmest city. This was immediately evident in the change in the landscape: where Gingko, maple and candyfloss-pink puffballs of early cherry blossom had characterised the scene in Tokyo, here these were supplanted by palm trees, tangled jungle greenery and beaches – home to some of the best for surfing in all of Japan. We stopped at a viewpoint and, as I gazed out across the lush scenery, a peregrine falcon suddenly swooped menacingly towards me, its coal-black eyes fixed on the packet of wagyu-flavoured crisps in my hands. I lurched backwards but, at the last minute, it peeled away from me, talons retracted. A lucky escape, perhaps – or was my oracle looking out for me? From there, we made for Aoshima, a diminutive island with a circumference of just 1.5km, connected to the mainland by a slender footbridge and surrounded by curious rock formations known as 'the Devil's Washboard'. It was all too easy to imagine a giant dragging its claws through the ebony mudstone and watching as it hardened into lines. The bewitching Aoshima Shrine sits at the centre of the island, surrounded by more than 400 species of subtropical plants. At the temple's oracle zone, I tossed a clay disk into a ring and it shattered, giving me – the oracle there claimed – another dose of Japanese luck. Next was Kagoshima, known as the 'Naples of the Orient' due to its coastal location and active volcano, Sakura Jima, which puffs clouds of ash (grey safe; white danger) into the bay. We visited the popular Ibusuki spa resort on the outskirts of the city, where I was buried up to my neck in black volcanic sand, then feasted on steaming bowls of sabi-sabi hot pot. That afternoon, we travelled inland to the Chiran Samurai Houses, a village of well-preserved Samurai dwellings – some still inhabited by descendants of the Shimazu samurai. Their clan had once ruled the area, until – during the Meiji Restoration of 1868 – Kagoshima's Satsuma samurai led a battle that toppled the Shogun (local feudal commander) and restored power to the Emperor. But it was our arrival in Nagasaki which proved the most poignant. As the sun rose over the East China Sea, the city's iconic Hirado O-hashi suspension bridge (tomato red, often likened to San Francisco's Golden Gate) appeared to part the low-lying clouds. Our first stop was the Atomic Bomb Museum, which displays a sobering and comprehensive collection that recounts the devastation inflicted on the city and its residents in 1945. More moving still is the peace memorial, located in a tranquil park nearby. With much to process, we broke for lunch, feasting on delicate sashimi and bento served in beautiful lacquerware boxes decorated with traditional Maki-e patterns, a 1,200-year-old technique of painting motifs onto lacquer and sprinkling gold powder before the material hardens. But there is far more to Nagasaki than its tragedy – and our afternoon was dedicated to exploring other aspects of its fascinating past. A notable highlight was the city's Dejima district, a former island built first to contain Portuguese missionaries, and later Dutch traders, to keep them away from the city's Japanese population during Japan's two centuries of isolation. The reconstructed residences show how life was for the only Westerners permitted in the country during that time. On the last day of the cruise – bound for Tokyo once more – I stood on the deck of Diamond Princess, watching southern Japan's craggy mountains melting into the horizon. I looked again at my waka. 'Your request will be granted.' It read. 'The patient will get well. Building a new house will be well. Marriage of any kind and a new employment are both well.' The waka was as good as its word. That week, I returned home to find a job offer awaiting me, our application for a loft extension approved, and news that a family member, who had been waiting on hospital test results, had been declared healthy. Suffice to say, the Shinto oracles had worked their magic. Essentials Emilee Tombs was a guest of Princess Cruises, which offers the 10-night Japan Explorer sailing from £979 per person (based on two sharing an inside stateroom) or £2,219 per person (based on two sharing a balcony stateroom). Departs February 24, 2026.


The Sun
5 hours ago
- The Sun
Holiday ATM warning that could leave holidaymakers without cash this summer
HOLIDAYMAKERS might end up without cash this summer if they are not aware of this banking feature. Many travellers choose to withdraw cash at the ATM when they are abroad. 1 However many could be unaware that there is a limit to how much you can take out every day The amount can vary so it is worth checking with your provider ahead of your travels to avoid being caught short. Below we share how much money each high street bank lets you withdraw each day. BARCLAYS The bank of over 20 million Brits lets customers withdraw up to £300 per day when abroad. This rises to £1000 for those with a premier account. Barclays said customers have amended their cash limits in their Barclays app then these will apply when abroad as well. That means if you set your withdrawal limit to £200, you will only be able to take this much out when you are abroad. You will also be charged a 2.99% fee for withdrawing cash abroad with your Barclays debit card. That means you would be charged an extra £2.99 for withdrawing £100 abroad. The fee will also apply if you pay using your debit card. Lloyds Lloyds said customers can withdraw up to £800 per day when abroad. However, it warned the amount you can take out may vary depending on which ATM you choose to withdraw cash from. Lloyds customers are also charged a 2.99% fee for using their card abroad. But Club Lloyds members have recently had this fee waived as part of changes to the scheme. It now costs £5 per month to have a Club Lloyds account after the price was hiked from £3. Halifax Halifax is a subsidiary of Lloyds and also has a £800 maximum withdrawal fee. Customers are also charged a 2.99% fee for using their card abroad. But from August 1, Halifax Rewards customers will have this charge removed. It comes as part of a refresh of the banking offer, which will see new features added and some taken away. SANTANDER The high street bank said the highest amount that customers can withdraw abroad is £300. The same rate applies to customers withdrawing cash in the UK. This applies to Santander customers using the Edge, Edge Up and Everyday current account. However customers with a Private Current Account, which has a £5 monthly fee, the daily withdrawal limit can be up to £1,500. Santander warned this may vary depending on the ATM. NATWEST NatWest has over 19 million users across the UK, making it another popular bank for customers. How much you can withdraw from an ATM when abroad depends on what type of account you have. For example, customers with a student, graduate savings and teen accounts have their limit set at £250 per day. This increases to £300 for those with premium accounts such as NatWest Silver of Platinum, which offers rewards and travel insurance. The bank also charges customers a 2.75% fee to use their debit card abroad. NATIONWIDE The bank, which has 17 million customers, said current account holders can withdraw up to £500 per day at an ATM abroad. However, the bank warned overseas banks may put higher limits on transactions. For safety purposes and customers may find they are only able to withdraw a sterling equivalent of £135 to £150 per transaction. If customers are affected by this, they can make further withdrawals on the same day up to the accounts withdrawal limit. Customers may be charged for their transactions. Nationwide customers are charged a 2.75% fee to use their debit card abroad. BEWARE OF THIS SIMPLE MISTAKE If you are travelling abroad this summer you should also be aware of this easy ATM mistake that could cost you. Cash machines will usually give you the option to pay in the local currency or in pounds. It may seem like the obvious option to pay in pounds, as it's more familiar and the currency linked to your card. However, by choosing this option you could end up paying more for the cash coming out of the ATM or for the goods you're paying for at the till. That is because the overseas bank will do the conversion to pounds and the rates are unfavourable. However, if you choose to pay in the local currency your card will instead do the conversion which is usually much more favourable. So if you are keen to save cash when abroad, you should opt to pay in the local currency and not pounds. Are there other options to for spending abroad? There are several specialist cards that can give you a great exchange rate. These cards include travel credit cards and pre-paid cards which can let you pay abroad without fees or at a set exchange rate. Senior Consumer Reporter Olivia Marshall explains all the options. Travel credit cards: Travel credit cards allow you to spend money abroad without being hit by any fees or hidden charges. But, they may still charge you for taking cash out. We recommend the Halifax's Clarity Card as it won't charge you for using it abroad, nor are there any fees for withdrawing cash. But you will be charged interest if you don't repay your balance in full at a rate of 19.9 per cent. And you will be charged interest on cash withdrawals until your balance is paid off too, at a rate of between 19.9 and 27.95 per cent depending on your credit score. In other words, just because you are using plastic abroad doesn't mean you don't have to pay these credit cards off like you normally would. Always pay off your balance before the end of the month with these cards to make sure that any money you saved isn't wiped away by paying interest. For more on travel credit cards you can read our guide here. Pre-paid cards: An alternative to carrying cash around is to get a pre-paid card. These cards allow you to put a set amount of cash on the card at a fixed exchange rate. So if the rate is good at the moment, you can put money on your card and it will stay that rate when you are on holiday. Just keep in mind that these cards can sometimes have hidden costs and charges so be sure to read the small print.