USA, contactless credit card whenever possible, otherwise it works as chip and sign. Apple Pay on occasion. I use Venmo to send and receive money from friends, for example last burg when for dinner and drinks, I paid for dinner and he paid for two rounds of drinks so he just Venmoed me $30 or so to balance it out.
Cash is only for street festivals, often the food or drinks cash line is shorter.
Now that my fantasy baseball commissioner finally got Venmo, I may never write another check again. For the past few years, they have been my only checks written.
When visiting the U.K. earlier this year, I used my contactless card almost everywhere. I only had to get cash for a couple of pubs with a £5 minimum to pay by card and one stubborn place which refused to take American chip and sign cards.
If I’d read the first post, I would have voted “cash” instead of “credit card”. Most of the money I spend is on credit cards, but I probably have more cash transactions. On-line, i mostly use PayPal, but it uses my credit card.
I haven’t seen barter mentioned yet as a form of payment. As a small business owner, I barter my services with several other local business people. It generally is a win-win situation*****.
*****of course you should consult a tax professional.
I use cash surprisingly often. For small transactions (under $10 or $20) but also to pay our cleaning service, to pay nurse who does my footcare, to pay for meals at the cheap Indian restaurant that has a sign asking to pay with cash, my barber and my wife’s hairdresser, and to pay my doctor if he has to fill out a form (for my driver’s licence renewal every two years after 80). Except for that restaurant, none of the others are set up for CCs. Nearly everything else with a CC. We write a few checks a year, mostly insurance premiums. My wife had to write one last week to the passport office as they accept no other form of payment. Most bills are paid online. Some are automatically debited from our account: our monthly condo fees and payment in full of our CC balance (so we never pay interest).
Credit card for most stuff. We have a lot of our routine bills (cable, cellphone, newspaper, and the like) charged to a credit card so we get the cashback bonus. The credit cards themselves are autopayed out of a bank account – but we are religious about reviewing the bills every month.
We use cash fairly frequently for expenses for which it’s easier. For example, entry fees at the bridge club – the club owners aren’t set up for credit card payment. When we go out with others and there’s one tab for the table, we pay our share in cash. Tuesday evening bridge, drinks after the game, and Thursday afternoon bridge runs us about $60 per week.
Checks are used infrequently. If one of my sibs for example sends flowers to a funeral on behalf of the whole family, I send a check for my share. We pay our real estate taxes via check.
I think I have a debit card (it’s also my ATM card), but I’ve never used it.
Bills are paid online out of my checking account. For all day-to-day spending, I use a credit card, which I typically pay off about twice per month (once every couple of weeks), partly because I don’t like to let the balances get too high and partly to make sure that I don’t ever miss the minimum monthly payment if I get busy and forgetful. I never let the balance carry over from one month to the next. I always pay it off.
I own my home (and a rental property) so no mortgages to pay. Back when I had a mortgage on the house I would write a check for that (online payments weren’t much of a thing back then) and when I had a mortgage on the rental property I would pay that online from my checking account. Any time I buy anything for the rental property, that comes out of a separate checking account, so either it gets paid directly online or it gets paid by debit card (buying supplies at Lowes, for example).
I own all of my vehicles so no car payment of any sort either. The last time I had a car payment, Ronald Reagan was president.
I hate everyone trying to track me by my mobile phone, and I don’t have a lot of trust in the security of a phone, so I do not pay anything at all, ever, with my phone.
Cash for the small stuff. Debit card for groceries, cigarettes. Automatic bank deduction for cell phone, internet/cable, mortgage. Checks for utilities, HOA fees, horse board, farrier, therapist, chiropractor, equine therapist…