The high cost of credit card swipe fees is getting more attention these days and it’s not just from Main Street retailers. America’s favorite pastime, baseball, has now stepped up to the plate and joined the fight against these skyrocketing fees as the Minnesota Twins just levied an antitrust suit against Visa and MasterCard, accusing them of price-fixing swipe fees and monopolizing the marketplace.
Make no mistake about it, this insidious fee impacts businesses of all shapes and sizes. Any purchase paid for by plastic is subject to a swipe fee of two to four percent of the price of the transaction whether you are buying a ticket to a baseball game or picking up a gallon of milk from the corner grocer.
Take, for instance, the cost of a Super Bowl ticket from earlier this month. The face value of tickets ranged anywhere from $500 to $2,600. Two percent of $2,600 is $50. If that ticket is sold at the average $4,300 resale price through a ticket dealer, the bank will take in another $86. That’s nearly $150 in swipe fees on a single ticket and with 83,300 seats in the MetLife Stadium, the banks and credit card companies brought in millions of dollars for transactions that could have been done profitably for mere pennies. Given this, it’s no small wonder that families in the United States pay an estimated average of almost $500 a year in swipe fees.
For more on the Minnesota Twins’ lawsuit against Visa and MasterCard, see here.
The average American household pays hundreds of dollars a year in credit and debit card swipe fees, which are part of the cost of virtually every transaction they make. Nearly $2 of every $100 consumers spend when they pay with plastic goes directly to Visa and MasterCard.The Merchants Payments Coalition is fighting for a more competitive and transparent credit card fee system that better serves consumers and merchants alike.
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