Card transaction fees are a growing monthly expense business owners say are passed on to consumers

The New York Times speaks with UC Law antitrust expert Susan Stephan

Credit and debit card fees are a big monthly expense for many small businesses operating on thin margins. Those costs are passed on to consumers and are becoming more onerous as fewer consumers carry cash, reports The New York Times.

Merchants of all sizes paid a total of $172 billion in processing fees in 2023, up from roughly $116 billion the year before the pandemic, according to the Nilson Report, which tracks the payments industry. That’s a 48 percent increase.

The Times reports that when they swipe a credit card, businesses pay fees to the bank that issues the card, to the payment network and, often, to companies like Toast and Square that help process the transaction. The biggest share of those fees — averaging more than 2 percent of a transaction amount — is set by payment networks like Visa and Mastercard and paid to the issuing bank, ultimately benefiting both the banks and the networks.

Susan Stephan, director of the master of legal studies program at UC Law, spoke with The Times for a story about the growing problem. 

“This concern is not going to go away,” Stephan told The Times. “Consumers are really concerned about rising costs in every arena, and this is one where there’s actually the potential for legislation to make a difference.”

Stephan teaches antitrust law along with intellectual property, information security, federal privacy, cyberlaw, blockchain and cryptocurrency law, workplace technology, alternative dispute resolution, law and economics, administrative law, workers’ compensation, and labor and employment law.

The Times reports the Justice Department in September filed an antitrust lawsuit against Visa, accusing the company of unfairly stifling competition in debit cards and charging unnecessarily high fees. Groups representing small business owners have cheered on that lawsuit.

Senator Richard Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, led a bipartisan effort to rein in credit card swipe fees with a bill introduced last year called the Credit Card Competition Act. The proposed law would force large banks that issue credit cards to enable at least two networks to process payments made with those cards. It would likely increase competition between payment processors beyond Visa and Mastercard, which could lower fees.

The stance of the incoming Trump administration on regulating payment systems remains unclear. 

Read the story in The New York Times online.

Featured top image courtesy of Istock.

Related Stories

1

Sugar overload killing hearts

November 10, 2025

Two in five people will be told they have diabetes during their lifetime. And people who have diabetes are twice as likely to develop heart disease. One of the deadliest dangers? Diabetic cardiomyopathy. But groundbreaking University of Cincinnati research hopes to stop and even reverse the damage before it’s too late.

2

Is going nuclear the solution to Ohio’s energy costs?

November 10, 2025

The Ohio Capital Journal recently reported that as energy prices continue to climb, economists are weighing the benefits of going nuclear to curb costs. The publication dove into a Scioto Analysis survey of 18 economists to weigh the pros and cons of nuclear energy. One economist featured was Iryna Topolyan, PhD, professor of economics at the Carl H. Lindner College of Business.

3

App turns smartwatch into detector of structural heart disease

November 10, 2025

An app that uses an AI model to read a single-lead ECG from a smartwatch can detect structural heart disease, researchers reported at the 2025 Scientific Sessions of the American Heart Association. Although the technology requires further validation, researchers said it could help improve the identification of patients with heart failure, valvular conditions and left ventricular hypertrophy before they become symptomatic, which could improve the prognosis for people with these conditions.