Is Congress Going to Kill Credit Card Rewards? - NerdWallet (2024)

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Credit card rewards are so common these days — so expected, even — that they can seem untouchable. But that could change.

Legislation known as the Credit Card Competition Act, first introduced in Congress in 2022, is described by its sponsors as encouraging “competition in electronic credit transactions.” But if lawmakers end up passing the measure, opponents say it could also torpedo the rich rewards and perks that cardholders have enjoyed for years.

“Will consumers lose? Probably,” wrote Brian Riley, director of the credit advisory service at Mercator Advisory Group, in an August 2022 post to the Mercator blog. “Their reward programs will dry up, just as they did with debit cards.”

The legislation failed to pass in 2022, but its sponsors reintroduced it in June 2023. Here’s what’s behind the measure and what it could mean for your wallet if it passes.

Merchants push for lower fees

Credit card rewards are funded, at least in part, by fees that merchants pay. When you use a credit card to make a purchase, the retailer is charged somewhere around 1% to 3% of the transaction amount in order to accept your payment and have it processed securely. It’s called interchange, aka a “swipe fee,” and it’s set by the payment network that the credit card runs on — often Visa or Mastercard.

Portions of that fee go to various parties, including the payment network, as well as the bank that issues your credit card.

Interchange fees are largely invisible to consumers. But they’ve long been a sore subject for many merchants — especially small-business owners — who call them burdensome, expensive and restrictive. As of now, if a merchant accepts a Visa credit card as payment, for example, it must be processed through the Visa network. The same goes for Mastercard, Discover and American Express transactions.

But the Credit Card Competition Act would require that banks of a certain size give merchants more choice when it comes to which payment network can be used for processing transactions involving their cards. They'd have to allow merchants a choice of more than one network — and per the bill, those networks cannot be "affiliated" with each other, nor can they be only "the two networks with the largest market share of credit cards issued" (which means Visa and Mastercard, which combine for more than 80% market share).

The measure’s sponsors — including U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill. — argue that competition is necessary and will benefit consumers.

“Credit card swipe fees inflate the prices that consumers pay for groceries and gas,” Durbin said in a news release. “It’s time to inject real competition into the credit card network market, which is dominated by the Visa-Mastercard duopoly.”

Supporters say that if merchants have more choice in payment networks, they’ll presumably choose one with lower fees, and those savings on interchange will filter down to customers in the form of lower prices.

“Swipe fees that drive up costs for small merchants and prices for American families are already the highest in the industrialized world," said Doug Kantor, an executive committee member of the Merchants Payments Coalition, in a June 2023 statement. "This carefully crafted bill will lead to lower fees and better security while helping merchants hold down prices."

Opponents argue the Credit Card Competition Act is designed solely to benefit behemoth retailers, and that lower interchange fees may mean less money for funding credit card rewards programs.

"This bill would allow these large merchants to use the cheapest credit card processing option, with no requirement to keep consumers’ data safe or return savings back to them," said Jim Nussle, president and CEO of the CreditUnionNational Association, in a June 2023 statement. “Interchange is the cost of doing business. Merchants like Target and Walmart reap the benefits of credit card usage with immediate payments, protection from fraud, and typically larger purchases by consumers — but don’t want to pay the cost of accepting credit cards.”

» READ: Could the Credit Card Competition Act impact credit unions?

What you can do

Groups on both sides of the Credit Card Competition Act encourage consumers to contact their representatives in Congress:

  • The Electronic Payments Coalition opposes the legislation, predicting that it will decimate credit card rewards programs without leading to a meaningful decline in retail prices for consumers. It provides guidance for contacting lawmakers at the website Hands Off My Rewards.

  • The Merchants Payments Coalition supports the legislation, saying it will make fees paid by retailers more transparent and competitive, could lead to lower prices, and doesn't have to affect credit card rewards programs. It explains its stance at the Merchants Payments Coalition website.

No guarantee that savings will be passed on

If it passes, it's far from certain that this measure would lower prices.

More than a decade ago, Durbin also sponsored legislation that reduced swipe fees on debit card purchases. Known as the Durbin amendment to the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, it differed from the current proposed measure (the Credit Card Competition Act would not directly "cap" swipe fees). Still, when Durbin's measure passed, supporters made the same argument: Because merchants would now save on fees, they’d pass along those savings to customers.

The results, though, are debatable. Multiple studies conducted in the years since the Durbin amendment became law have concluded that it didn’t have much, if any, effect on retail prices. In fact, a 2015 economic brief published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond included survey results estimating that more than 21% of merchants actually increased their prices after the rule went into effect.

And banks found ways to recoup some of what they lost in debit card fees — an estimated $14 billion, according to the Federal Reserve — by raising fees on checking accounts. A 2017 report from Federal Reserve economists found that banks subject to the Durbin amendment were 35.2% less likely to offer free checking accounts and, on average, hiked monthly fees on both interest and noninterest checking accounts (17% for the former; 20% for the latter). The report also found that the average minimum balance requirement to avoid monthly fees rose by at least 50%.

Meanwhile, debit card rewards programs all but disappeared as the swipe fees that had funded them declined. Opponents of the Credit Card Competition Act say history is poised to repeat itself.

“The debit card interchange limitations that Senator Durbin slipped into the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010 did not result in any consumer cost savings," Nussle said in his statement. "Since that time, credit card fraud rates have doubled. Why would we expect a different result from this legislation? We are going to see retailers lining their pockets with money without reducing prices, leaving consumers and small-business owners in the lurch.”

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How credit card rewards look in other countries

Britain offers a glimpse at where credit card rewards might be headed if interchange is sharply curtailed in the U.S.

U.K. interchange fees have been capped for years at much lower rates — and credit card rewards, too, tend to be lower than in the United States. Common ongoing rewards rates on U.K. cards range between 0.5% to 1%; for anything above that, you might expect to pay an annual fee.

Australia also reduced interchange fees years ago, and according to a 2012 report from the Reserve Bank of Australia, the result was much the same: “Overall, reward points and other benefits earned from spending on credit cards have become less generous while annual fees to cardholders have increased.”

What's next?

The fate of the Credit Card Competition Act is unclear.

The legislation was, for a time in 2022, attached as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which funds military programs and is what many lawmakers view as must-pass legislation. Durbin and co-sponsor U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., were attempting to tie the Competition Act to surcharges that stores on military bases imposed on credit card users.

The measure failed to make the final military spending bill, however, and when the 117th Congress adjourned at the end of 2022, all unpassed legislation died. In June 2023, though, the Credit Card Competition Act was reintroduced, this time with even more bipartisan sponsorship. There were renewed attempts to add it as an amendment to the NDAA, but yet again it didn't make that bill. The bill's sponsors are now hoping the Credit Card Competition Act will get a standalone vote later this year.

In the meantime, industry groups have lined up against the measure.

“The adverse effects of this bill [include] the disappearance of card rewards programs that families of all income levels use to stretch their budgets,” according to a joint statement issued in September 2022 from multiple banking and trade groups, including the American Bankers Association and the Electronic Payments Coalition.

If it does pass, here are some things to note as a consumer:

  • It might not spell an end to credit card rewards entirely. After all, rewards still exist in countries with lower interchange fees — it's just that you might have to settle for less lucrative rates, higher annual fees, or scaled-back perks packaged in a different way. Issuers with an eye on customer loyalty may continue to view certain benefits as a cost of doing business.

  • There may be times when debit or cash might make more sense. If a merchant charges a credit card "processing fee" of 2%, but your rewards card is now earning just 1% back, you may be better off reaching for your debit card.

  • Routinely evaluate what's in your wallet. Regardless of what Washington does, you don't need to stand pat if your current credit card no longer works for you. Your issuer might grant you a product change to a better card — one with higher rewards or lower fees. And if not, you can shop around for a card that does a little more.

» MORE: What to expect if the Credit Card Competition Act passes

Is Congress Going to Kill Credit Card Rewards? - NerdWallet (2024)

FAQs

Could Congress really kill credit card rewards? ›

Congress is considering big changes to credit card transaction fees. The Credit Card Competition Act has not (yet) passed Congress, but it could cause banks to make big cutbacks in credit card reward programs.

What is the Senate bill to get rid of credit card rewards? ›

Legislation known as the Credit Card Competition Act, first introduced in Congress in 2022, is described by its sponsors as encouraging “competition in electronic credit transactions.” But if lawmakers end up passing the measure, opponents say it could also torpedo the rich rewards and perks that cardholders have ...

Will credit card rewards disappear? ›

As long as you hold up your end of the credit card agreement and pay your bill on time every month, you shouldn't lose any rewards. However, credit cards that are co-branded with airlines or hotels don't usually follow the policies of the card issuer.

What are the new credit card laws for 2024? ›

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Releases Final Rule on Credit Card Late Fees, with Overdraft Fees on Deck. On March 5, 2024, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (Bureau) announced the final rule governing late fees for consumer credit card payments, likely cutting the average fee from $32 to just $8.

Will the government pay off my credit cards? ›

When it comes to credit card debt forgiveness, you may think there are government programs that help get rid of debt. Unfortunately, there is no such thing as a government-sponsored program for credit card debt relief.

Why credit card points aren t worth it? ›

The biggest criticism of credit card rewards is they incentivize spending money. It's already easy enough to overspend with credit cards and end up in debt. When you're earning points or cash back, it's even more tempting to make that big impulse buy you really shouldn't.

What is the federal law on credit cards? ›

Your issuer must show you the cost of credit as a dollar amount and an annual percentage rate (APR), and disclose terms in a meaningful and uniform manner. If you fall behind on your credit card payments, debt collectors may not use abusive, unfair, or deceptive practices to collect money from you.

Are credit card rewards reported to IRS? ›

Credit card rewards you earn by making purchases with the card aren't considered income and are not taxable. This includes rewards miles, points and cash back. The IRS treats these types of credit card rewards as rebates or discounts on your purchases, rather than income.

What is the new credit card act? ›

The Credit Card Competition Act of 2023 is pitting retailers against banks. Proponents say it'll benefit merchants by lowering some of their operating costs, enabling them to reduce prices.

Why did my credit score drop 100 points after paying off credit card? ›

Why did my credit score drop 100 points after paying off debt? This could be due to changes in your credit utilization ratio or credit mix. It's also possible that the drop in your credit score was unrelated to the debt payoff. Why did my credit score go down after paying off my credit card?

Why did my credit card rewards disappear? ›

You might lose your credit card rewards if the card issuer closes your account because your credit score drops, you miss payments or you're gaming the rewards program. Otherwise, you might be able to use or transfer your points before closing your card, or get a grace period to use them after closing your account.

Why did my credit score drop 50 points after paying off credit card? ›

It's possible that you could see your credit scores drop after fulfilling your payment obligations on a loan or credit card debt. Paying off debt might lower your credit scores if removing the debt affects certain factors like your credit mix, the length of your credit history or your credit utilization ratio.

What is the 7 year rule on credit cards? ›

Most negative items should automatically fall off your credit reports seven years from the date of your first missed payment, at which point your credit score may start rising. But if you are otherwise using credit responsibly, your score may rebound to its starting point within three months to six years.

What is the 5 24 rule credit cards? ›

The 5/24 rule is an unofficial policy that dictates that Chase won't approve you for its cards if you've opened five or more personal credit card accounts from any issuer in the last 24 months. Put simply, the number of cards you've opened in the previous two years will affect your approval odds with Chase.

What is the Dodd Frank Act for credit cards? ›

Businesses may now set a minimum charge for credit card purchases of up to 10 dollars. The Federal Reserve can cap debit transaction fees that businesses pay, for some transactions. Businesses must have a choice of debit networks that processes their transactions.

Can magnets destroy credit cards? ›

Scratches and general wear are common causes of demagnetization, but prolonged exposure to magnets can also ruin a card's magnetic strip. Fortunately, you don't need to worry about magnetic damage if your credit card has an EMV chip.

Can congressional committees kill a bill? ›

Bills are placed on the calendar of the committee to which they have been assigned. Failure to act on a bill is equivalent to killing it. Bills in the House can only be released from committee without a proper committee vote by a discharge petition signed by a majority of the House membership (218 members).

Who is behind Hands Off My Rewards? ›

Consumers can also indicate their opposition to the act by sending a message through “Hands Off My Rewards,” which is a project run by the Electronic Payments Coalition.

Who is against the credit card competition act? ›

The Electronic Payments Coalition opposes the legislation, predicting that it will decimate credit card rewards programs without leading to a meaningful decline in retail prices for consumers.

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