New York, Feb 8 : Retailers in 40 U.S. states can now charge up to 4 percent extra
when consumers pay for goods and services with a credit card.
These
so-called "checkout fees" went into effect January 27, and do not apply to debit
card payments. The fees are illegal in California, New York, Texas and seven
other states.
It is up to individual businesses to decide whether or not
to add the fee. They also need to disclose it to consumers.
The surcharge
is the result of the biggest anti-trust settlement in U.S. history. In 2005, a
group of merchants claimed that MasterCard, Visa, and nine other companies
including JP Morgan Chase & Co conspired to fix the fees that stores pay to
accept credit card purchases.
After years of negotiations the case, which
was in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, settled.
The credit card companies and banks agreed to pay $6 billion to the merchants
who sued.
As part of the settlement, the merchants are allowed to charge
customers a fee equal to the cost of accepting cards, typically 1.5 percent to 3
percent of the purchase price.
"While it is legal to charge extra, there
are still limitations," said Kathy Li, the San Francisco director of Consumer
Action, a consumer advocacy agency. "For example, what kind of cards can be
charged? What cards can't be charged?"
To avoid the surcharge, consumers
can pay with cash or debit cards. And when shopping online, "there's always
PayPal or other electronic payment options that can't charge extra," said
Li.
Ends
SA/EN
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Retailers may add surcharge in credit card transactions
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