New Zealand: Some BP Dealer Sites to Pass on Credit Card Fees
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Wednesday, 13 January 2010 |
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Five independently owned BP stations in Wellington may be the first
businesses in the country to pass on credit card transaction costs to
their customers.
The stations were the first businesses to take advantage of being
able to put a surcharge on credit card usage. The fee sees
customers pay 60c extra for every transaction under $30 and 90c for
every transaction over $30. Credit card companies charge
retailers a transaction cost and previously that fee was not able to be
passed on to the customer. However, last year the Commerce Commission
agreed with financial institutions that merchants should be able to
surcharge customers using credit cards.
At the time commission chairman Mark Berry said the deal would save
retailers up to $80 million over three years. However, commission
figures also estimated it could cost credit card users $340 million a
year if all businesses passed on the charge.
Massey University Centre for Banking Studies spokesman David Tripe
believed customers would start seeing more of the practice but did not
believe it would become the norm.
Automobile Association spokesman Mike Noon said fuel pumps should have
signage advising of the credit card charge. The AA had spoken to the
rest of the petrol companies who said they had no intention of bringing
in the fees. BP said the company had no plans to introduce the
charge at the stations it owned, however about two thirds of BP
stations were independently owned, and they could decide for themselves.
PetrolWorld 110110 Source: Local News
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