The Scotsman

More card payments than cash

● 119m contactles­s cards now in use, mainly by those aged 25-34

- By VICKY SHAW

Debit card payments surpassed cash payments for the first time last year, according to a financial trade associatio­n.

UK Finance said debit card use overtook cash for the first time as the most frequently used payment method in the UK in the final quarter of 2017.

The boom in contactles­s payments across the UK is a driver of growing debit card use, according to the Payment Markets report.

Debit card payments overtook the number of those made by cash for the first time last year, a trade associatio­n has said.

There were 13.2 billion debit card payments in 2017 – eclipsing the 13.1 billion payments made in cash, according to UK Finance.

The body said debit card use overtook cash for the first time as the most frequently used payment method in the UK in the final quarter of 2017.

The tipping point happened a few months earlier than it had previously forecast.

The boom in contactles­s payments across the UK is a key driver of the growth of debit card use, its UK Payment Markets report said.

There were 5.6 billion contactles­s payments made last year on both debit and credit cards combined.

UK Finance said nearly twothirds (63 per cent) of people in the UK now use contactles­s payments. The average adult made nine contactles­s payments per month in 2017 – up from five in 2016.

By 2027, the average adult is expected to make 22 contactles­s payments per month.

By the end of 2017 there were nearly 119 million contactles­s cards in circulatio­n.

The most popular location to make contactles­s payments during 2017 was at the supermarke­t, with over a third (38 per cent) of all contactles­s payments being made in these stores.

People aged between 25 and 34 were the most likely group to use contactles­s cards last year, with 77 per cent of people in this age group making contactles­s payments during 2017.

Whilst people aged 65 or older are less likely than younger people to make contactles­s payments, more than half of this age group made contactles­s payments during 2017, the report said.

UK Finance said that last year, around 3.4 million people hardly used cash at all, instead relying on cards and other payment methods to manage their spending.

But on the other hand, many people still rely heavily on cash. Around 2.2 million people mainly used cash for their day-to-day shopping in 2017.

Cash is still the second most frequently used payment method, after debit cards.

UK Finance said that while cash use is expected to continue to fall over the next decade, it is anticipate­d that cash will still retain its place as the second most frequently used payment method in 2027.

Contactles­s cards are expected to account for over a third (36 per cent) of all payments in 2027, up from 15 per cent in 2017.

Stephen Jones, chief executive of UK Finance, said: “We’re far from becoming a cash-free society and despite the UK transformi­ng to an economy where cash is less important than it once was, it will remain a payment method that continues to be valued and preferred by many.”

 ?? Picture: Lisa Ferguson ?? 0 Some 3.4million of us hardly use cash at all, using cards for all payments
Picture: Lisa Ferguson 0 Some 3.4million of us hardly use cash at all, using cards for all payments

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