Maestro is simply the debit version of MasterCard.
True but doesn't make this any less accurate ...
Maestro cards do not work at most point-of-sale terminals in the United States. You're going to be limited to ATM access.
While Maestro is a debt card version of Mastercard it is virtually unheard of in the US and as a result almost all POS machines will simply reject it as an unsupported card.
LEARN TO READ.
Maestro cards do not work at most point-of-sale terminals in the United States. You're going to be limited to ATM access.
Maestro is simply the debit version of MasterCard.
He's claiming they are MasterCard, although he could just be dancing around it since Maestro is in fact Mastercard's. What would be nice to clarify would be if OP could
take a picture of one of the cards and post it here. As a point of sale developer with some experience in retail management and having lived in Korea using American cards of all types, I think I'll be able to tell if these cards are worth anything just by just seeing them.
Did anyone else find that cryptic? Point is, if he takes a picture of the card, we'll see which logos are on the card and what bank it's from and just know what it actually is, instead of just hearing a speel on how its a "mastercard product" or some nonsense (which it probably is).
It's a Maestro card, which I stated in the initial post. I don't know how to make it plainer than that without the description of it being a MasterCard product...