Merchants Secure Greater Authority Over Card Acceptance in $38 Billion Visa-Mastercard Agreement, Though Critics Highlight Ongoing Concerns
- Visa and Mastercard reached a $38B settlement with U.S. merchants over swipe fee disputes, ending a 20-year antitrust battle. - The deal reduces interchange fees by 0.1% for five years, caps consumer rates at 1.25%, and grants merchants flexibility to reject high-fee cards. - Critics argue the agreement fails to address systemic industry issues, with merchants warning it preserves payment giants' fee-raising power. - Analysts warn the changes could disrupt rewards ecosystems, while lawmakers push for ref
Visa and
Under the agreement,
The agreement also allows merchants to add surcharges to credit card sales—a practice already permitted under current regulations, but now with broader application. These surcharges could hit small businesses especially hard, as they often operate with slim profit margins. The National Retail Federation (NRF)
Visa and Mastercard have not acknowledged any wrongdoing in the settlement. Both companies stated that the agreement delivers "substantial relief" to both merchants and consumers and increases flexibility
The settlement is now pending approval from U.S. District Judge Margo Brodie, who previously rejected a $30 billion proposal in June 2024 for being inadequate. If approved, the new rules could be implemented as soon as late 2026 or 2027
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