
Card Blocked Abroad? How to Call Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo or Citi From Any Country
Your card just got declined at a hotel desk in another country, your banking app is showing a fraud alert, and the "call us" number it gives you starts with 1-800 — which does not work from where you are standing. Here is exactly how to reach the four biggest US banks from abroad, and how to do it without paying carrier roaming rates for a 40-minute hold queue.
Why the Number on Your Card Fails Overseas
Two separate problems hit travelers at the same time:
- Toll-free numbers (800, 888, 877, 866) often cannot be dialed from foreign networks. Toll-free means the bank pays for the call — but only US carriers can bill them for it. From a foreign SIM, the call is usually blocked, or connected at a premium rate. We cover the mechanics in our guide to calling US toll-free numbers from abroad.
- Roaming rates make the hold queue expensive. Banks answer fraud lines in minutes, but card disputes and unblocking can keep you on the line for half an hour. At typical carrier roaming rates of $1–3 per minute, a 40-minute call costs $40–120 — to fix a card that was blocked to "protect" you.
Every major US bank quietly maintains a normal, direct-dial number for exactly this situation. Banks bury them, so here they are.
The International Numbers That Work
| Bank | International (direct-dial) | Collect option | Where it's published |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chase | +1 302 594 8200 (cards) | +1 713 262 1679 | chase.com contact pages |
| Bank of America | Use the number on your card statement | +1 315 724 4022 (official international collect) | bankofamerica.com international contact page |
| Wells Fargo | Number on the back of your card (non-800 lines connect from abroad) | Collect number listed on wellsfargo.com's international access page | wellsfargo.com |
| Citi | Number on the back of your card | Citi publishes country-specific and collect numbers per card | citi.com |
Three practical notes:
- "Collect" still exists, and banks pay for it. Bank of America explicitly tells overseas customers to call collect on +1 315 724 4022 — you place the call through an international operator and the bank accepts the charge. The catch: operator-assisted collect calls are increasingly awkward to place from mobile phones, which is why the direct-dial route is usually easier.
- The back of your card is the source of truth. Wells Fargo and Citi print card-specific service numbers on the card itself and on statements; the non-toll-free versions of those numbers connect from any country. When in doubt, check the bank's own "contact us from outside the US" page — never a number from a random forum.
- Fraud lines don't need your PIN. No legitimate bank agent will ask for your full PIN or online banking password. If a "bank number" you found somewhere asks, hang up.
The Cheap Way to Sit in the Hold Queue
You have three realistic ways to place that +1 call from abroad:
| Method | Cost for a 40-min call | Works with dead SIM? |
|---|---|---|
| Carrier roaming | $40–120 at $1–3/min | No — needs roaming enabled |
| Hotel room phone | Often worse — hotels add heavy surcharges | Yes |
| Browser calling (VoIP) | ~$0.80 at $0.02/min to US numbers | Yes — only needs WiFi |
That last row is the one to remember. A browser-based service like BoraPhone treats your call to a US direct-dial number as a normal call to the United States — around $0.02 per minute, no matter which country you are calling from. Forty minutes on hold costs less than a dollar, and it works from a laptop on hotel WiFi even if your phone's SIM is completely dead. There is nothing to install: you sign up with an email and dial from the browser. The first call is free, which is usually enough to at least reach the fraud line and confirm what happened.
A 5-Step Script for the Blocked-Card Call
- Get your details in front of you before dialing: card number, billing ZIP code, recent transactions (open your banking app or statement), and your passport for identity questions.
- Dial the direct international number — full format, e.g. +1 302 594 8200. From a browser dialer, enter it exactly like that, plus sign included.
- Say "lost or stolen card / fraud department" at the menu. Fraud queues are answered faster than general service, and they can unblock cards too.
- Confirm the two or three flagged transactions. Most travel blocks are triggered by the first foreign transaction after a quiet period. Confirming them usually lifts the block within minutes.
- Before hanging up, ask two questions: "Is my card now active for [country]?" and "Are there other holds on the account?" This prevents a second blocked payment an hour later at dinner.
Prevent the Next One
- Set a travel notice in your banking app before each trip (Chase, BoA, Wells Fargo and Citi all support it, buried under card settings).
- Carry a second card on a different network — a Visa and a Mastercard fail independently.
- Keep a way to call the US that doesn't depend on your SIM. Whether it is BoraPhone in a browser tab or any other VoIP line, decide before the trip how you would call your bank if your phone plan died. Our checklist for international calling covers this in more detail.
A blocked card abroad feels like an emergency, but it is a fifteen-minute fix — as long as you can actually reach the bank without paying roaming prices for the privilege.

Written by
Serpius DentoSerpius works with communication and customer relations at BoraPhone. With hands-on experience helping users navigate international calling, he writes practical guides based on real conversations with customers worldwide.
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