Banking in Athens for Expats (2026)
Opening a bank account in Athens is one of the most important early steps of your relocation. Based on our experience helping hundreds of expats with financial setup, here's a comprehensive guide to banking options and best practices.
Local Banking Overview
Eurobank, Alpha Bank, and National Bank of Greece are the major banks. Opening an account requires AFM (ΞΟΞΉΞΈΞΌΟΟ Ξ¦ΞΏΟΞΏΞ»ΞΏΞ³ΞΉΞΊΞΏΟ ΞΞ·ΟΟΟΞΏΟ β tax number), obtainable at the local tax office (DOY) with passport and proof of address. Process can be bureaucratic β patience is needed. Digital banking is improving but Greek banking is less advanced than Northern European systems. Revolut is increasingly used, especially by younger Greeks and expats. ATMs are widespread in urban areas but may be scarce on smaller islands. Cash is still used for many transactions, especially at small businesses and tavernas.
Documents Typically Required
Most banks will ask for the following, though requirements vary by institution:
- Passport (original + photocopy) β must be valid for at least 6 months
- Visa or residence permit β some banks require specific visa types
- Proof of address β rental contract, utility bill, or official registration certificate
- Proof of income or employment β salary certificate, tax returns, or employment contract
- Tax identification number β local tax registration (often required before banking)
Pro tip from our advisory practice: Bring more documents than you think you'll need. Different bank branches may have different requirements, and having everything ready prevents multiple visits.
International Banking Alternatives
Many expats in Athens combine a local bank account with international digital banking for maximum flexibility. This is what we recommend to our clients:
Wise offers the real exchange rate with transparent, low fees. Trusted by 16M+ people β the #1 tool we recommend to every expat client.
Try Wise Free βWise (formerly TransferWise) β The #1 tool for expats globally. Features: local bank details in 10+ currencies, a debit card that works at the real exchange rate, transparent fees (0.3-1% vs banks' 3-5%), and instant international transfers. We recommend this to every client without exception.
Revolut β Great for everyday spending in EUR. Free currency exchange up to monthly limits, instant spending notifications, budgeting features, and virtual cards for online subscriptions. Premium plan ($8/mo) adds travel insurance and higher exchange limits.
N26 β European digital bank with free basic account, IBAN for SEPA transfers, and good mobile app. Available in EEA countries. Insurance products add-on available.
Best Banking Strategy for Athens
Based on our advisory experience, the optimal setup for most expats in Athens is:
- Primary: Wise multi-currency account β receive salary/payments, transfer between currencies, use the debit card for daily spending with real exchange rates
- Secondary: Local bank account β for local rent payments, utilities, and services that require a local account/IBAN
- Optional: Revolut β for cashback offers, additional card for security, and budget tracking
Common Banking Pitfalls
- Don't use your home bank for daily spending abroad β hidden FX fees of 2-5% on every transaction add up to hundreds of dollars per month
- ATM fees vary widely β some ATMs charge $3-7 per withdrawal on top of your bank's fee. Wise's card offers free ATM withdrawals up to $100-250/month
- Keep some cash β even in modern cities, some landlords, markets, and small businesses only accept cash
- Set up online banking immediately β some admin tasks can only be done through online banking in local language (Google Translate helps)