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Different payment methods can impose additional costs on merchants. A payment surcharge is an extra fee charged by a merchant to cover these additional costs.
The below provides more information on payment surcharges for consumers and for businesses and other organisations to assist them with surcharging appropriately.
Consumers – Payment surcharges explained
Different products cost different amounts and the same is true with different payment methods. Where there is an extra cost to the seller for providing a payment method, there might be an extra cost to you for using that method. This is a payment surcharge. In practice, this is the additional fee you may come across when using a higher cost payment method such as your credit card or contactless debit card to make a payment.
We would expect any surcharges to be no more than 0.7% for contactless debit card payments or 1.5-2% for credit card payments. Many merchants only have one rate, so we consider any surcharge above 2% is hard to justify.
There are payment methods that should not incur any surcharges, such as when inserting or swiping your debit or Eftpos card. This is because there is no additional cost to the seller for using these payment methods. This note explains surcharging in further detail.
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Payment surcharges for consumers PDF (201 KB)Merchants – Appropriate payment surcharging explained
Accepting different payment methods can impose different costs on you as a merchant. A surcharge is an extra fee charged to recoup any additional cost from your customers where they choose to use a way to pay that is more expensive for you to provide. This note explains how you can surcharge appropriately.
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Appropriate payment surcharging explained PDF (178 KB)Some payment methods, such as Eftpos, don’t incur additional costs to merchants and consumers can use these methods to avoid surcharges.