Telegram & Gazette

For restaurant­s, card fees leave a bad taste

Bill would allow business to add a fee to consumer

- Colin A. Young

Cash used to be king, but most diners now pay their bill with a credit or debit card and restaurate­urs told lawmakers Monday that the habit is squeezing their already-thin profit margins.

Massachuse­tts is one of two states that does not allow businesses to add a surcharge to customer purchases in order to cover the cost of credit or debit card processing fees, according to the Massachuse­tts Restaurant Associatio­n. Connecticu­t is the other state that prohibits businesses from charging a customer a surcharge for using one payment type over another, according to that state’s Department of Consumer Protection.

“When I started in this business more than 25 years ago, credit card usage was only about 20 percent of the business. It wasn’t a huge overhead expense. Now it’s over 90 percent of the business. Very few customers choose to pay cash now,” Douglas Bacon, head of the Red Paint Hospitalit­y Group, said. “And, in fact, they’re being incented by the credit card companies to get points, cash back and miles.”

Bacon was among those who testified before the Joint Committee on Consumer Protection and Profession­al Licensure Monday in support of a bill that would allow a business to add a fee to consumer purchases to cover the costs of processing payment of credit or debit cards as long as the business informs the customer of the surcharge “by a sign conspicuou­sly posted on the seller’s premises.” The bill was filed by former Sen. Anne Gobi, who resigned in June to become the state’s first director of rural affairs.

“The average small restaurant pays between $20,000 and $50,000 annually to process credit card fees and reports credit card fees as being the third-highest cost they pay for, behind labor and goods,” Jessica Muradian, the Massachuse­tts Restaurant Associatio­n’s director of government affairs, told the committee.

And while Muradian said that restaurant­s

“The average small restaurant pays between $20,000 and $50,000 annually to process credit card fees ...”

have dealt with credit card processing fees and the way that they eat into profit margins for years, she said the pandemic “has definitely exacerbate­d the issue.”

Nancy DeFina, the director of human resources and compliance for Niche Hospitalit­y Group, said the seven-location restaurant group based in Worcester pays a fee of between 1.7 and 3.95% of the total transactio­n price (including taxes and tip), depending on the type of card used, plus an additional fee of 15 cents per swipe to the processing company.

“Every swipe has a cost to it,” she said.

And any transactio­n that involves a card not physically swiped at the restaurant — like online and phone orders that grew in popularity during the pandemic — is subject to the highest percentage fee.

“Last year, my company spent $505,315 on credit card processing fees alone. In comparing this number to prepandemi­c 2019, we spent $464,438 with 10 locations versus seven (locations) in 2022, which is an 8.09 percent increase with less sales in 2022 versus 2019 and also less locations,” DeFina said. “This year, we have spent $280,550 so far, with 152 days left to go in the year, not to mention (payment card industry) compliance costs to be able to securely accept credit card payments.”

Bacon told lawmakers that the cost of the card processing fees is essentiall­y baked into the prices of dishes on his restaurant­s’ menus. That means that all customers, regardless of their personal method of payment, end up covering those expenses. If the state were to pass the Gobi bill, he said, “over time menu prices would adjust a little bit. So cash prices would end up being a little bit less and the customer who chooses to use a credit card would pay a convenienc­e fee at the end of the transactio­n.”

Committee co-chair Rep. Tackey Chan asked Bacon why cash-paying customers could not get a discount now and the restaurate­ur said that they can.

“Gas stations in many cases post two different prices on the gas pumps, and I’m sure you’ve noticed this. In restaurant­s, it becomes nearly unfeasible and impossible to offer two different prices and for us to publish menus with two different prices for a cheeseburg­er or a beer or a glass of wine for cash or credit, it’s just extremely cumbersome,” he said.

Congress could vote as soon as this week on a bill called the Credit Card Competitio­n Act, which would require the largest credit-card issuing financial institutio­ns in the country to make at least two credit card processing networks available on their cards instead of just one. That could allow merchants to pick a network with lower fees, creating competitio­n in the market.

Peter Brennan, executive director of the New England Convenienc­e Store and Energy Marketers Associatio­n, wrote in an op-ed this week that the bill would help stop conglomera­tes like Visa and Mastercard “from fee-ing consumers and small business owners into financial despair,” and called on U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey to “be on the right side for consumers.”

Brennan said that swipe fees paid by store merchants soared 17% in 2022 to $160 billion nationwide and cost families on average $1,000 per year. He also noted that credit card companies took in more than $25 billion in net profit last year.

“Our industry is made up of small business owners, many of whom are immigrants, and more than 60 percent who are single-store operators. These are not wealthy corporatio­ns they are our neighbors and friends and they’re being squeezed relentless­ly by overregula­tion and constantly escalating costs of insurance, utilities, taxes and fees,” he wrote. “This legislatio­n is one simple step that Congress can take to throw these entreprene­urs and job creators a lifeline — especially as they face historic inflation — and show consumers that their hard-earned dollars matter.”

Some of those who supported the Gobi bill Monday pointed out that while restaurant­s and other businesses cannot pass credit card processing fees on to their customers, the Massachuse­tts Department of Revenue can and does.

 ?? ALLAN JUNG/TELEGRAM & GAZETTE Massachuse­tts Restaurant Associatio­n’s director of government affairs ?? Massachuse­tts is one of two states that does not allow a surcharge to cover the cost of credit or debit card processing fees.
ALLAN JUNG/TELEGRAM & GAZETTE Massachuse­tts Restaurant Associatio­n’s director of government affairs Massachuse­tts is one of two states that does not allow a surcharge to cover the cost of credit or debit card processing fees.

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