Fees war between retailers and credit card companies is heating up - Marketplace (2024)

Merchants from gas stations to ice cream shops to Amazon have complained about credit card fees and contracts, and many are lobbying for credit card regulation. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Dan Connor watched hand-cut steak fries cook in hot oil at Donovan’s Pub in Woodside, Queens. Connor took it over 11 years ago, but it’s been a staple in the neighborhood since 1966.

“We’ve won best burger a few times,” he said, but emphasizes the breadth of the menu; it stretches from French onion soup to wings to Italian dishes.“When you think of restaurants that are in the middle of the neighborhood that everyone knows each other, that’s Donovan’s.”

Also getting fried? Connor’s patience.

“We’re still seeing a lot of restaurants closing now, because of the inflation and the cost of everything that’s going up, and just, you can’t make money and survive,” he said. Donovan’s Pub, like many restaurants, is at the crossroads of economic trends that are eroding its bottom line. Inflation, rising labor costs, rising utilities and … credit card fees.

“The swipe fees have gone up over the years, and people are more inclined to charge their meals now, to charge anything now,” he said.

Every time a customer swipes their credit card, the merchant — whether a restaurant, a store, a deli or Amazon — pays fees to credit card companies, processors and banks. Online orders require even higher credit card fees because the risk of fraud is higher.

Not only are more people ordering online, more people are swiping their cards more often in general. It could be for convenience, could be for reward points.

“You know, when we first took over 11 years ago, we were probably doing 50-60% of our business in cash. And now that’s probably down to 10% to 20%,” he said. “Everybody is charging, but they’re also swiping more.”Instead of running a tab, buying eight beers and paying at the end, people simply swipe for each beer, incurring both percentage and flat fees for the restaurant. “That happens a lot.”

What all of this means is that more of Connor’s very thin profit margin goes to credit card fees.

Merchants paid $126 billion in credit card fees in 2022, an increase of 20% from the year before, and more than double from 2013, according to Nilson Report.

“It’s at the point where swipe fees are the third-highest cost for restaurants right now, behind food and labor,” said Sean Kennedy, executive vice president for public affairs at the National Restaurant Association. Convenience stores say it’s their second-largest expense.

Some of the dramatic increase in what merchants are paying for the use of credit cards is inflation — as prices have risen, so have the fees charged as a percentage of transactions.

Some of the increase is due to a growing use of cards generally, as Connor has experienced.

But merchants say it’s also due to credit card companies and banks raising their fees.

This is a contentious part of the fight that’s been stewing between the retail and credit card industries.Credit card companies insist their fees haven’t changed much.

“Our rate has remained at 2% for the last decade,” said Richard Hunt, chairman of the Electronic Payments Coalition, which represents credit card companies, banks that issue cards and airlines that work with credit cards on points programs.“Tell me what else has remained flat over the last decade. Not a cup of coffee, not doughnuts.”

According to Nilson report, the weighted average percentage of fees paid by merchants for the use of credit cards has fluctuated between 2.09% and 2.24% since 2013. The rate for Visa and Mastercard credit cards was 2.24% in 2022.

Merchants argue these percentages are averages of hundreds of different kinds of rates for different cards, merchants and situations, and conceal increasing numbers of high-end credit cards that charge merchants higher rates.

“A lot of times what Visa and Mastercard will do,” said Doug Kantor, general counsel for the National Association of Convenience Stores, “is they’ll create new rates, leave the old ones in place, and say, ‘Well, we didn’t increase all these rates in here,’ and they sort of average out all their rates, even though they know the banks are issuing more cards at the higher rate.”

A credit card that earns you all those travel miles tends to charge merchants a higher fee. Merchants aren’t allowed to single that card out — if you take one kind of Visa you have to take them all. Nor can they tell consumers they’re going to charge more for using that card because of the fees.

“If you could charge consumers, pass on the cost, then they can make a decision,” said Joe Stiglitz, professor of economics at Columbia University. “Is the cost that is being levied on the merchant worth the benefits that are being received?”

Merchants from gas stations to ice cream shops to Amazon have complained about the fees and contracts, and many are lobbying for legislation that would increase competition in the credit card industry. Credit card companies argue that the market is plenty competitive for consumers, and that’s how it should be.

“The consumer is in charge here. They’re gonna drive what the merchant should or should not take,” said Richard Hunt with the Electronic Payments Coalition.Regulation that reduces fees, he said, would threaten one of consumers’ favorite perks: points. “There’s no doubt reward points would be severely reduced or not even at all in use anymore,” he said.

Indraneel Chakraborty, chair of the finance department at the University of Miami, agreed.

“There is sufficient competition in the credit card industry such that all the transaction fees people are paying are passed on back to the consumers through rewards,” he said.

But as with nearly everything in this industrial feud, this is contested as well.In ongoing antitrust litigation that resulted in a multibillion-dollar settlement between a group of retailers and Visa and Mastercard, TD Securities Managing Director Reto Kohler testified that “rewards expenses do not take up a majority of interchange fee revenue,” and that issuers “have other streams of income, such as interest income and fees, from which they are free to fund rewards.”

Merchants also point out that rewards programs still function well in countries like Australia that have regulated credit card fees.

The two sides also debate who exactly would benefit and who would suffer from regulation — consumers, large businesses, small businesses; dueling research and recriminations trade punches in circles. And so the battle between industries rages on, with hundreds of billions of dollars at stake.

Stories You Might Like

Restaurants crack down on no-shows

DoorDash offers lower-fee service to restaurants

How to act as a responsible foodie

Restaurants on wheels

$10.24 for a burrito? Here’s why some restaurants don’t round up.

Who has added credit card debt during the pandemic?

There’s a lot happening in the world. Through it all, Marketplace is here for you.

You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible.

Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.

Fees war between retailers and credit card companies is heating up - Marketplace (2024)
Top Articles
High School in Korea runs on routines
The ABCs of REITs
Use Copilot in Microsoft Teams meetings
Rosy Boa Snake — Turtle Bay
Safety Jackpot Login
123 Movies Black Adam
East Cocalico Police Department
Zitobox 5000 Free Coins 2023
Localfedex.com
Buckaroo Blog
Jet Ski Rental Conneaut Lake Pa
Hallelu-JaH - Psalm 119 - inleiding
Gfs Rivergate
Diesel Mechanic Jobs Near Me Hiring
10-Day Weather Forecast for Florence, AL - The Weather Channel | weather.com
The Cure Average Setlist
List of all the Castle's Secret Stars - Super Mario 64 Guide - IGN
Drago Funeral Home & Cremation Services Obituaries
Curver wasmanden kopen? | Lage prijs
Euro Style Scrub Caps
Football - 2024/2025 Women’s Super League: Preview, schedule and how to watch
Prot Pally Wrath Pre Patch
Ltg Speech Copy Paste
Craigslistodessa
Bi State Schedule
King Soopers Cashiers Check
Devotion Showtimes Near The Grand 16 - Pier Park
October 19 Sunset
Baddies Only .Tv
Nail Salon Open On Monday Near Me
24 slang words teens and Gen Zers are using in 2020, and what they really mean
Greencastle Railcam
Ark Unlock All Skins Command
Weather Underground Bonita Springs
877-292-0545
Ashoke K Maitra. Adviser to CMD's. Received Lifetime Achievement Award in HRD on LinkedIn: #hr #hrd #coaching #mentoring #career #jobs #mba #mbafreshers #sales…
WorldAccount | Data Protection
Infinite Campus Parent Portal Hall County
Craigslist Lakeside Az
Xxn Abbreviation List 2023
All Obituaries | Sneath Strilchuk Funeral Services | Funeral Home Roblin Dauphin Ste Rose McCreary MB
Electric Toothbrush Feature Crossword
Www Craigslist Com Atlanta Ga
Martha's Vineyard – Travel guide at Wikivoyage
FedEx Authorized ShipCenter - Edouard Pack And Ship at Cape Coral, FL - 2301 Del Prado Blvd Ste 690 33990
Scythe Banned Combos
Learn4Good Job Posting
Ewwwww Gif
Diablo Spawns Blox Fruits
Ret Paladin Phase 2 Bis Wotlk
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nathanael Baumbach

Last Updated:

Views: 6144

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanael Baumbach

Birthday: 1998-12-02

Address: Apt. 829 751 Glover View, West Orlando, IN 22436

Phone: +901025288581

Job: Internal IT Coordinator

Hobby: Gunsmithing, Motor sports, Flying, Skiing, Hooping, Lego building, Ice skating

Introduction: My name is Nathanael Baumbach, I am a fantastic, nice, victorious, brave, healthy, cute, glorious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.