Business Standard

Switch to contactles­s cards before festive shopping

However, beware that if they’re stolen, a few transactio­ns of below ~2,000 can be made

- BINDISHA SARANG

Unlock 5.0 is unfolding. As people gear up for the festive season, shopping at stores is bound to rise. Buyers will inevitably hand over their physical cards to shopkeeper­s, thereby exposing themselves to the risk of infection. However, there are ways one can make payments while avoiding physical handling of the card. Using a Near Field Communicat­ion (NFC), better known as a contactles­s card, is one of them. According to Srini Krish, president, Fiserv Global Services: “Contactles­s payments have gained traction among issuers, merchants, and customers as a fast, easy, and secure way to transact.”

What is it?

Cards that bear a wifi-like symbol are contactles­s cards. All the user has to do is tap it against a card reader enabled for contactles­s payments for the transactio­n to be completed. Says Adhil Shetty, chief executive officer (CEO), Bankbazaar: "Your card no longer needs to change hands to enable payment. There is also no hassle of swiping or punching in your PIN for low-value transactio­ns."

If you don't have such a card, contact your bank to get one. Even the RBI wants you to have one. In May this year, it permitted payment networks such as Visa, Mastercard, and National Payments Corporatio­n of India (NPCI) to allow tap-and-go functional­ity on card payments.

How it works

With NFC technology, the card uses a magnetic field to communicat­e with an Nfc-enabled card point of sale (POS) machine when the two are brought within a few centimetre­s of each other. The card has a chip and a radiofrequ­ency (RFID) antenna that enables it to complete the transactio­n. No PIN is required for transactio­ns below ~2,000.

Security features

The RBI’S new norms for securing debit and credit cards, which came into effect from October 1, allow users to switch on and off facilities on regular cards for internatio­nal and online transactio­ns. These norms apply to contactles­s cards too. Says Sujai Raina, head — business developmen­t, India and South Asia, Visa: "Popular transactio­n types such as tap-and-pay for contactles­s payments, online payments for e-commerce transactio­ns, and internatio­nal payments can now be switched on or off according to need via channels such as mobile banking app, internet banking platform, etc."

Almost all banks that issue contactles­s cards provide users with a 100 per cent liability cover. Security measures are in place to ensure that only a minimum number of transactio­ns can be made before the PIN is required. Says Shetty: "The main concern is if the card is lost. Since contactles­s card transactio­ns don’t require a PIN for transactio­ns below ~2,000, there is a risk of fraudulent purchases.”

Other alternativ­es

Some cards have also taken a digital avatar. Says Ashwini Kumar Tewari, MD & CEO, SBI Cards: "With smartphone penetratio­n in India soaring, credit cards have also changed form to reside securely on the mobile phone." SBI cardholder­s can make payments via Google Pay by simply unlocking their Android smartphone­s and tapping them on an Nfc-enabled POS to make payments, provided the smartphone has NFC capability. Many other banks also offer this facility.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India