Watch this video to understand how the transactions you make are facilitated and who’s involved.
Interchange Fees
Frequently asked questions
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Whenever you buy something with your Visa card, four parties are involved: You, your bank, the retailer you buy from, and the retailer’s bank.
Both banks perform a series of steps to ensure your payment is processed and transferred securely, and it reaches the retailer promptly.
When your bank sends your payment to the retailer’s bank (known as the acquiring bank), a small fee is retained. This is called the interchange fee. Visa doesn’t receive any of this fee.
If interchange didn’t exist, your bank would find it difficult to cover the costs it incurs in operating your card services, such as fraud prevention, systems maintenance and customer call centres. If this were the case, your bank may stop investing in innovation, stop issuing cards altogether or increase the fees that you pay for its card services.
Similarly, when the retailer’s bank sends the payment to the retailer, it deducts a small fee – this is called the Merchant Service Charge and incorporates a number of component fees such as the interchange fee, costs to cover services provided by their bank, such as guaranteed payment, and the technology to accept card payments such as a terminal or contactless reader. This rate is negotiated directly between the retailer and its bank. Visa doesn't participate in this process.
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The level of interchange, in most cases, is a small ad valorem percentage of the total transaction amount.
This fee is set by Visa and has traditionally varied by the type of transaction, the product involved and from country to country. From 9 December 2015, European regulation on interchange fees (Regulation (EU) 2015/751 of the European Parliament and of the European Council of 29 April 2015 on interchange fees for card-based transactions, “the IFR”) imposes interchange fee caps on most product types within the European Economic Area (EEA).
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Interchange is used to help the payment system function quickly and securely:
- It helps cover the costs of operating card services that banks might otherwise pass onto consumers
- It contributes to investment in creating the ease and security of electronic payments that consumers have come to rely on and expect; for example, Chip and PIN and Verified by Visa help reduce fraud and increase transparency
- It helps investment in the future development and maintenance of the system which in turn allows companies like Visa to make payments faster, more secure and more convenient, such as Contactless. Any system that is used by millions of consumers and businesses each day benefits from continual investment
Interchange Fees
Inter Visa Europe interchange fees - European Economic Area (EEA)
Rates applicable to Visa Europe transactions where the card is issued outside the EEA and the merchant outlet is located within the EEA.
Intra Visa Europe interchange fees - European Economic Area (EEA)
Rates applicable to Visa Europe transactions where both the card is issued and the merchant outlet is located within the EEA.
Interchange fees by country
Select a country below to view the relevant interchange reimbursement fees PDF.