Business

Mastercard denies report it plans to raise credit card fees on merchants, calls news coverage ‘misleading’

Mastercard on Tuesday denied a media report that this fall the payments processing giant is planning to increase credit card fees, which many merchants pay when they accept customers’ credit cards.

The Wall Street Journal, citing sources and documents it had viewed, reported last week that fee increases were scheduled to start in October and April at Mastercard and rival Visa.

“Mastercard is not raising interchange rates in the US this fall and has no plans to do so,” the company said. It added that it is also not raising network fees in the United States required for the processing of Mastercard transactions this fall.

Meanwhile, Visa also said in a blog post that recent press coverage on the issue was “misleading.” The world’s largest payments processor added that despite strong growth in the use of its cards, overall interchange fees on Visa transactions have been flat for the past decade.

A sticker shows that a store accepts MasterCard in Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., July 25, 2018.
“Mastercard is not raising interchange rates in the US this fall and has no plans to do so,” the company said. REUTERS

“Moreover, over the past few years, Visa has lowered interchange for the vast majority of small businesses and in key segments such as supermarkets and quick service restaurants,” a Visa spokesperson said in an emailed statement to Reuters.

“We stand by our reporting,” the Wall Street Journal said in a statement to Reuters.