MarketJule
New member
Hello fellow expats! I'm writing to share a bad experience I had trying to open a bank account today with Santander Río. This bank refused to open an account for me, despite the fact that I have a residencia precaria (my residencia permanente is in process), a US passport, a CUIT, and a certification of my residence (certificado de domicilio) that was issued by the local police station (comisaria) in my neighborhood. Also, I am married to an Argentine, working here in Buenos Aires, and completing my master's degree here at UBA. At inmigraciones a few weeks ago, they explained that I could open a bank account (which is why they authorized RENAPER to issue me a CUIT [for those that do not know, a CUIT is like a social security number]).
Santander Río said they would only open an account for me if I had my DNI (which should take somewhere between another 3-7 months to receive, based on the time it has taken others to receive theirs that have shared their experiences on this site).
After my bad experience at Santander Río, I called Galicia (another major bank here) and they said they would be glad to open account for me with my residencia precaria, US passport, CUIT, and cerificado de domincilio (in lieu of the certidficado, they would also accept a utility bill). I will post on this site again once I have opened the account to share my experience with Galicia - let's hope it's a good one!
I am sharing my bad experience with Santander Río because I wholeheartedly hope that other Americans living in Argentina will avoid banking with them. There are too many social and economic problems to list here that banks like Santander Río only help perpetuate (informality [many of those who live in city's villas (slums) keep their money under a mattress] black-market employment, assimilation, integration, etc, etc. etc.) with discriminatory policies similar to the one I experienced today - not to mention the daily inconvenience of living in a country as a foreigner without the ability to open a bank account!
Santander Río said they would only open an account for me if I had my DNI (which should take somewhere between another 3-7 months to receive, based on the time it has taken others to receive theirs that have shared their experiences on this site).
After my bad experience at Santander Río, I called Galicia (another major bank here) and they said they would be glad to open account for me with my residencia precaria, US passport, CUIT, and cerificado de domincilio (in lieu of the certidficado, they would also accept a utility bill). I will post on this site again once I have opened the account to share my experience with Galicia - let's hope it's a good one!
I am sharing my bad experience with Santander Río because I wholeheartedly hope that other Americans living in Argentina will avoid banking with them. There are too many social and economic problems to list here that banks like Santander Río only help perpetuate (informality [many of those who live in city's villas (slums) keep their money under a mattress] black-market employment, assimilation, integration, etc, etc. etc.) with discriminatory policies similar to the one I experienced today - not to mention the daily inconvenience of living in a country as a foreigner without the ability to open a bank account!