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Current account costs could rise under new EU plans

Plans have now been published by the EU to cut retailers' costs but this could mean we'll start paying more for our current accounts.

The cost of using your debit or credit card could be about to rise because of new European Union rules to cap the amount retailers have to pay when processing transactions.

Every time a transaction is made, retailers must pay a fee towards the bank providing the card, but these are to be capped to 0.3% of each transaction.

Capping these ‘interchange fees’ will reduce retailers’ outgoings by £2.4 billion. But it’s feared that retailers may not pass on their savings to consumers, while banks will meet the shortfall by increasing the amount people pay for debit and credit cards.

Interchange fees

Under the new plans, shops and businesses will pay no more than 0.2% for debit cards and 0.3% for credit cards when processing a transaction from a foreign card.

At the moment retailers pay the banks around 0.9% for credit card transactions so the change will make quite a difference. These are then passed onto shoppers in the form of higher prices for the things we buy.

Many customers are unaware of the extra costs because they are absorbed into the price of the things we buy. But the British Retail Consortium (BRC) predicts that the changes will save the whole sector around £362million.

The EU also wants to ban surcharges, such as when you pay ‘administration’ fees for booking airline tickets.

These fees vary wildly between different countries and there are no clear guidelines over the amount they should be. Capping these fees, the EU says, will help to create an EU-wide payments market.

How customers lose out

There is confusion over who will pick up the cost when the changes come into force.  

It could be the case that savings are passed onto consumers and therefore the things we buy go down slightly in price.

More concerning could be that the banks, which will lose out when the caps are implemented, will make the money back by charging customers more to open a current account.

A study published earlier in the month by European Economics and the University of Essex for MasterCard suggested we could pay £11 for debit cards and £25 for credit cards.

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Comments



  • 04 August 2013

    Useful information. The story of Barclays giving away customers' data was in the Guardian a couple of weeks back. If enough people cancel their accounts they will have to think again. As it is, much of our personal stuff is given away by GCHQ to NSA, with the help of our government and telephone companies. The US is even paying a tiny fee to HMG for the privilege of data theft. And they will be reading this post with interest. Several AngloSaxon expletives are appropriate here but lets keep it clean! I don't know how compromised the banks are on this matter but would welcome a Lovemoney article on same.

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  • 03 August 2013

    Not all card issuers are acquirers (the bank that the merchant uses to process the transaction and who charges the fee). So all the issuing but not acquiring banks won't be affected at all and will be more competitive. A lot of hot air that has got all the bank (and EU) haters on their high horses. Little substance in it though.

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  • 31 July 2013

    This would shake out the number of accounts and cards people hold. I have three current accounts and three debit cards and two credit cards. The latter with Tesco for UK purchases and the other with Halifax Clarity for foreign ones. So if a charge come in I shall cut all these down to one of each. The competition will soon initiate a cheap version and I will latch onto that. Of course abroad people pay for current accounts now. Certainly in the US where Wells Frago have a charge now of $13 a month as I have one of those too. Banks are not free here either as we earn nothing on most current account is credit

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