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by yywwbbn 1397 days ago
Well in the EU credit/debit card fees are capped at 0.3/0.2% so while not exactly fair it’s not a huge deal compared to the US (where everyone is paying for credit card users rewards and cash backs).

AFAIK only SEPA direct debit transfers can be canceled/reversed so normal transfers are still not (easily) reversible.

2 comments

> Well in the EU credit/debit card fees are capped at 0.3/0.2% so while not exactly fair it’s not a huge deal compared to the US (where everyone is paying for credit card users rewards and cash backs).

And cash has it's own processing fees (security - cameras, register, transportation; counting), which are also hidden. Some smaller places (e.g. cafés) have moved to cashless payments only, because the costs around cash, and the hassle involved at every step, is too much.

that is very true, and so often ignored or forgotten
0.3/0.2% caps are for customers accounts (and don't cover missed payments which can be punitively charged). merchant fees can still be very high, and silently passed on to customers. The fact that the law obfuscates what the CC companies are actually getting from a transaction should worry us, as they can sneak merchant fees up each year without push-back from the general public.
You’re right. It seem the fees are still around 1% at least for smaller businesses in my country.