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    Home » New EU rules on card fees enter into force

    New EU rules on card fees enter into force

    npsBy nps9 June 2016Updated:25 June 2024 Finance No Comments3 Mins Read
    — Filed under: EU News Headline1
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    New EU rules on card fees enter into force

    Image Lotus Head from Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa – sxc.hu

    (BRUSSELS) – New rules to make the costs of payments with debit or credit cards more transparent to retailers and consumers and allow them to make efficient choices entered into force Thursday.

    When a customer pays for a purchase with a credit or debit card, the retailer’s bank (the “acquiring bank”) pays a fee to the bank that issued the payment card to the consumer (the “issuing bank”). A so-called “interchange fee” is then deducted from the final amount that the retailer receives from the acquiring bank for the transaction.

    The Regulation on Interchange Fees caps the interchange fees for the most widely-used cards and imposes transparency obligations on banks and retailers to improve the functioning of the payment market for all cards. While the rules on interchange fee caps have applied since December 2015, the rules on transparency apply from Thursday, 9 June 2016.

    Financial Services Commissioner Jonathan Hill welcomed the changes: “Under the rules it is possible to almost eliminate surcharging on consumer card payments. So, this regulation will bring some direct benefits to European consumers.”

    Key changes include:

    • Free to choose preferred payment type: Many payment cards have multiple brands, so-called “co-badging” – to name a few examples, in Belgium a single payment card often offers both Bancontact and Maestro as payment options, in Italy it is common to have Bancomat/PagoBancomat and Maestro on a single card or in Denmark Visa and Dankort. The new rules allow consumers to select and retailers to promote the most cost-efficient brand to minimise costs. In particular, retailers will be able to install a preferred brand in their payment terminals, and consumers have the final say when they make the payment. Previously, the preferred brand was typically selected by card issuing banks or card operating schemes, which have an interest in selecting the brand generating the highest interchange fee for them.
    • One card for all – The ability to choose the preferred payment type will become even more important: Currently consumers often have to keep multiple cards for different card products issued from their bank. From now on, consumers will be able to require their bank to co-badge a single card (or in the future their mobile phone) with all card products that they issue to the consumer (e.g. Visa, MasterCard, Maestro or American Express). This does not change the bank’s right, however, to refuse to offer the customer a given card product (e.g. a premium card).
    • Better information to consumers – All retailers will have to display the cards they accept in a clear and unequivocal manner at the entrance of the shop and at the till. For online sales, this information must be displayed on the website or other applicable electronic or mobile medium.
    • Know what you pay for – Interchange fees are indirectly paid by retailers, who subsequently pass the fee on to all consumers in the form of higher prices. So far, interchange fees have largely been kept in the dark. Banks typically charged retailers a single “blended” fee for card transactions using different brands, although the interchange fee they paid for each type may be different. The new rules will provide transparency: Banks will now have to specify to the retailer the fee for each transaction, unless the retailer explicitly requests a blended fee.
    Interchange Fees Regulation - background guide

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