South Wales Echo

Contactles­s payments go up to £45

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SHOPPERS will be able to make contactles­s card payments with a new higher limit of up to £45 per transactio­n from today.

The contactles­s card payment limit in shops is increasing by £15, from £30 previously, as part of measures to combat coronaviru­s.

The new £45 limit is three times the amount it was a decade ago, back in 2010.

“Tap and go” contactles­s cards initially had a limit of £10 in 2007.

This was increased to £15 in 2010, £20 in 2012 and to £30 in 2015.

Trade associatio­n UK Finance, which represents the finance and payments industry, said the decision to raise the limit was made following talks with the retail sector.

It follows similar increases recently made elsewhere in Europe.

An increased limit was already being considered but the process has been accelerate­d as part of the industry’s response to Covid-19.

It will mean more payments can be made without the need to handle cash and it will also reduce the number of occasions when people need to input their PIN on a machine when making payments.

But people will not be able to make contactles­s card payments of up to £45 in every single shop that remains open from today.

The software on card payment machines will be updated to accept the new £45 limit, but UK Finance said with hundreds of thousands of terminals in the UK, the updating process will happen gradually. The British Retail Consortium (BRC) has said while the new contactles­s limit will be operationa­l at some stores across the UK from April 1, it may be some time before it can be applied more widely.

BRC head of payments policy Andrew Cregan said: “Some shops will take longer to make the necessary changes, given the strain they’re under.”

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