Visa and Mastercard near settlement with merchants, would lower fees, WSJ reports
The settlement aims to modestly reduce interchange fees by about 0.1 percentage point for five years and grant merchants options to reject certain card categories, pending court approval.
- The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday that talks have Visa and Mastercard nearing a settlement to lower fees and give merchants more power to reject certain credit cards.
- Under the proposed terms, Visa and Mastercard would lower interchange fees by an average of about 0.1 percentage point over several years.
- Merchants would gain the ability to reject certain types of cards, including premium rewards cards that cost them more.
- The potential deal aims to resolve a 20-year-old legal dispute over interchange fees and acceptance rules.
48 Articles
48 Articles
Visa finds even $200B can’t resolve battle with merchants
Nine years ago, the $5.7 billion sticker price to settle one of the biggest class-action lawsuits ever was rejected. Last year, it climbed to $30 billion, just to be thrown out again. Now, it’s north of $200 billion, and there’s growing doubt even that will be enough to end two decades of fighting. Visa and Mastercard this month took yet another swing at a deal that seeks to end a battle with thousands of retailers — and reshape the fees underpi…
Credit cards could get cheaper, but also more limited, under proposed swipe fee settlement
A proposed settlement between credit card giants Visa and Mastercard and merchants could result in lower prices, but it could also mean fewer payment options for consumers.The settlement addresses swipe fees charges retailers pay every time a customer uses a credit card. According to the National Retail Federation, credit card companies charged merchants an average 2.35% swipe fee in 2024. That means for every $100 credit card purchase, a mercha…
Will the Visa-Mastercard settlement impact your credit card rewards?
Visa and Mastercard have reached a revised settlement with merchants in an antitrust case that has been ongoing for almost 20 years over "swipe" (interchange) fees.The proposed deal could allow some merchants to refuse to process select Visa and Mastercard products or even add a surcharge when you choose to pay with them at checkout.Here's what you need to know about this new development and how it might impact earning credit card rewards in the…
New deal may soon allow stores to reject rewards credit cards
Merchants pay higher fees when consumers buy products with rewards credit cards
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