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    Can I encourage my customers to use a different card brand or payment type?

    U.S. merchants may now steer customers to use a particular network brand, such as Visa or MasterCard, to a type of payment card, such as a “non-reward” credit card, or to another preferred form of payment. U.S. merchants may also encourage a customer who initially presents a Visa card to use a payment card with a different network brand, a different type of payment card, or a different form of payment. Merchants may engage in any of the following steering activities:

    • Offering a customer a discount or rebate, including an immediate discount or rebate at the point of sale;
    • Offering a free or discounted product;
    • Offering a free or discounted or enhanced service;
    • Offering the customer an incentive, encouragement, or benefit;
    • Expressing a preference for the use of a particular brand or type of general-purpose card or a particular form of payment;
    • Promoting a particular brand or type of general-purpose card or a particular form or forms of payment through posted information, through the size, prominence, or sequencing of payment choices, or through other communications to a customer;
    • Communicating to a customer the reasonable estimated or actual costs incurred by the merchant when a customer uses a particular brand or type of general-purpose card or a particular form of payment or the relative costs of using different brands or types of general-purpose cards or different forms of payment; or
    • Engaging in any other practices substantially equivalent to these.

     

    Visa also revised its rules regarding the size, color, and prominence of the Visa mark displayed at the point of sale for U.S. merchants. Under Visa’s revised rules, a U.S. merchant is not required to display the Visa mark in a size as large as other payment marks. U.S. merchants may promote acceptance of brands other than Visa through the size, prominence, or sequencing of payment choices. The rule changes enhance merchants’ ability to manage the costs associated with accepting electronic payments. However, the merchant must continue to respect a cardholder’s ultimate decision to pay with Visa; the settlement does not impact the merchant's existing obligation to accept for payment properly presented Visa cards, including rewards cards. Surcharging of Visa cards and steering among Visa cards based on the issuing bank is not permitted. Merchants must ensure that their steering practices are not performed in a confusing manner.
     

    Notice of MasterCard Rules Changes
    As a result of the consent decree and final judgment that was entered between MasterCard and the U.S. Department of Justice, MasterCard agreed to modify Rule 5.11.1 “Discrimination” in the United States as follows:

    A merchant may request or encourage a customer to use a payment card with an acceptance brand other than MasterCard or another form of payment or a card of a different product type (i.e., traditional cards, premium cards, rewards cards, etc.) than the card the consumer initially presents. A merchant may do so by methods that include, but are not limited to:

    • Offering the customer an immediate discount from the merchant’s list, stated, or standard price, a rebate, a free or discounted product or service, or any other incentive or benefit if the customer uses a particular payment card with an acceptance brand other than MasterCard or another form of payment.
    • Offering the customer an immediate discount from the merchant’s list, stated, or standard price, a rebate, a free or discounted product or service, or any other incentive or benefit if the customer, who initially presents a MasterCard, uses instead another payment card or another form of payment.
    • Expressing a preference for the use of a particular payment card or form of payment.
    • Promoting the use of a particular general-purpose payment card with an acceptance brand other than MasterCard or the use of a particular form or forms of payment through posted information, through the size, prominence, or sequencing of payment choices, or through other communications to customers (provided that merchants will abide by the MasterCard trademark standards relating to the display of its marks)
    • Communicating to customers the reasonably estimated or actual costs incurred by the merchant when a customer uses particular payment cards or forms of payment or the relative costs of using different general purpose payment cards or forms of payment.


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