Ich habe kürzlich ein Bankkonto bei der Nationalbank von Griechenland eröffnet, weil Revolut allein für meine Situation nicht ausreichte.

Interessanterweise war die Kontoeröffnung selbst der einfachste Teil.

Was mich überraschte, war, was danach geschah:

• fast zwei Wochen auf die Debitkarte warten

• das seltsame PIN-System, bei dem man Nummern per SMS erhält und die PIN anhand einer gedruckten Tabelle rekonstruieren muss

• Die Aktivierung des Internetbankings dauerte eine weitere Woche und erforderte einen erneuten Besuch in der Filiale

Ich habe in einigen anderen EU-Ländern gelebt und so etwas noch nie erlebt.

Ist das bei griechischen Banken normal, oder hatte ich einfach Pech mit der Filiale?

https://i.redd.it/r9ituj595fng1.jpeg

Von hollandlive1

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19 Kommentare

  1. The „strange PIN system“ is used for security. First time I’m hearing that opening internet banking requires visiting the bank **again**. I’ve had accounts in 4 banks until now and not one of them had that

  2. Ok_Communication_764 on

    Not the same experience as you, got everything done same day. #Eurobank

  3. You chose the worst bank in all of Greece.
    Also you can open an account online nowdays you don’t need to visit the bank.

  4. Saicomantis on

    I recently had to open an account in a different bank due to my employer depositing my salary to this specific one. I managed to do it within half an hour by video call with a representative. I still received the debit card a few days later by mail, but overall it was a painless experience.

    I guess it depends on the bank. Some of them have not caught up yet to the digitalisation of many businesses processes. Others have done so for several years.

  5. ComprehensiveDay9893 on

    Pretty standard procedure from what I’ve heard. Not going to try doing that until I see comments that it’s easy and fast, so I hope before pension 😅

  6. >I recently opened a bank account at the National Bank of Greece **because Revolut alone was not enough for my situation.**

    Not related, but you’ve been played. Revolut was always enough for your situation. SEPA Regulation (EU) No 260/2012 and Payment Accounts Directive 2014/92/EU mandate that all businesses must accept payments between IBANS of EU origin. So, Revolut, with its Lithuanian IBAN was always enough for paying rent, receiving your salary, or anything of the sort. Businesses and individuals are allowed to request you make a new bank acount, and you have the right to refuse. IBAN discrimination is illegal in the EU.

    And the sooner we all realize this and abandon these good for nothing Greek Banks, the better.

  7. Relevant_Salt5429 on

    without a greek tax number I’m surprised they didn’t ask for a personal note from the OBGYN who delivered you

    Also whatever you just experienced is the simplified version of the pro-covid hell. At least with the pandemic a lot of our digital services got actually really good

  8. Welcome to Greece and have a nice stay 😁
    Most if not all kind of paperwork in our country takes forever. We also have fees for all sorts of things too. For example if you want a simple Certificate of Bank Ownership you need to pay 20€ in some banks.

  9. Thats the easy part believe me. Wait u til they ask you the same documents again in a year ir so to verify that you are still you otherwise they will block your account.

  10. Greek banks are shit. I have one account and have, on many occasions, wanted to switch to another bank, but ultimately I’ve never bothered because they’re all horrible and the process is a pain.

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