Many small businesses are breathing a bit easier as inflation has cooled and the race for workers slows. But consumersā steady embrace of credit cards is taking a growing bite out of their margins.
Gene-Christian Baca, the owner of Walterās Hot Dogs in Mamaroneck and White Plains, New York, estimated that he now pays $50,000 a year in costs associated with processing credit card transactions, a sum he says has ballooned with rising card processing rates and more customers paying with cards over cash.
āEvery year, 3% of all of our sales is washed away just to credit card processing,ā he said.
Merchants have long shouldered these āswipe fees,ā the catchall term for businessesā payments to banks and card companies each time customers swipe. While a federal rule caps debit card swipe fees at 21 cents per transaction, those for credit cards can be much higher.
And as many shoppers ditched cash for plastic cards or mobile payment apps, businesses have seen credit card transactions swell. They made up 32% of all U.S. consumer payments in 2023, up from 24% in 2019, according to a Federal Reserve study. Cash shrunk its share to 16% over the same period, down from 26%.
Spending on American Express, Discover, Mastercard and Visa cards in the U.S. soared to $5.25 trillion in the first half of 2024, up from around $4.98 trillion during the same period in 2023, according to data provided to NBC News by the Nilson Report, which covers the payments industry.
These shifts in customer habits have added to many businessesā costs. Merchants paid an average of 2.26% in swipe fees for transactions using the Visa and Mastercard credit card networks in 2023, the latest year with available data, according to Nilson. The two companies accounted for more than $100 billion of the $172 billion in total U.S. swipe fees in 2023, Nilson said, and Visa accounted for 52% of credit card spending on the four major card networks.
Some of Visaās fees are now going up. The card network raised two of the credit card swipe fees it charges banks and processing companies on Jan. 1. The move comes amid growing pushback from critics, including some lawmakers, who say swipe fees are excessive and frequently get passed on to shoppers.
āMost likely, higher swipe fees from Visa would mean higher prices for people at the store eventually,ā said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. āItās unclear as to how quickly that would happen, but generally speaking, when these fees tend to go up, merchants would tend to pass those extra costs along to consumers.ā
The Merchants Payments Coalition, an advocacy organization backed by leading restaurant, retail and other trade groups, estimates Visaās additional fees will total $100 million per year.
āThat seems like not a lot, but it increases the amount of every single transaction, and that really adds up over time,ā said Doug Kantor, a member of the Merchants Payments Coalitionās executive committee and general counsel at the National Association of Convenience Stores.
The Merchants Payments Coalition says the $172 billion in swipe fees in 2023 set a record and estimates they cost the average family more than $1,100. The group is pushing for more transparency with credit card fees, more competition among networks and lower fees.
Visa says its changes are meant to make the network better. When confronted by policymakers about some of its swipe fees, the company has said that it āhas no incentive to set [them] at levels that are too high or too low.ā
A Visa spokesperson told NBC News in a statement: āWe are constantly enhancing our network to better serve the businesses and consumers that increasingly choose to transact with us. Everything we do is designed to make paying and being paid with Visa more convenient, secure and reliable.ā
The Electronic Payments Coalition, an advocacy group supporting card networks including Visa, says average swipe fees havenāt changed much over the last decade even as sales have increased. The organization has also noted that businesses incur distinct costs by handling cash. Those can range from operating cash registers to paying bank account fees.
Businesses handle swipe fees differently. Some, like Walterās Hot Dogs, bake the costs into their prices. Others are trying to entice customers to use cash. Patz Deli in Manchester, New Hampshire, charges customers a 4% convenience fee for credit card transactions to cover the costs of processing fees and credit card equipment.
āItās a cost that we donāt necessarily have to take on ourselves because itās not our credit card,ā said owner Pat Burns. āItās your choice to use it, not ours, but weāre the ones who get charged for it.ā
He said the deli introduced the convenience fee within the last couple of years as it faced mounting pressure from taxes, wages and other expenses.
āAt the end of the month, by the time you bring home any type of money, 10 other people have already had their hands in it,ā Burns said. āEven just a little bit like on the credit cards, 3, 4% goes a long way helping small businesses stay afloat.ā
Consumer experts recommend using cash for small transactions, using rewards cards to make the most of each purchase and paying in person rather than over the phone when possible. Phone transactions often result in a higher fee for businesses due to security risks.
The fight over swipe fees has reached Congress. The Credit Card Competition Act, a bipartisan bill spearheaded by Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Roger Marshall, R-Kan., aims to boost competition among credit card processing companies ā something the Merchants Payments Coalition says is essential.
But the bill has stalled. Several groups supporting banks, credit card networks and credit unions are opposing the measure, saying it would harm small businesses and consumers, in part by limiting rewards.
āSwipe fees are definitely a really contentious thing and have been a battlefield between credit card issuers and networks and merchants for a long time,ā said LendingTreeās Schulz. āIt feels like that battle is really only going to keep going on for the next little while.ā
