Amazon and Visa end global dispute over credit card fees

Credit card fees have been a growing source of tension between Amazon and Visa

Author: Alex UsherPublished 17th Feb 2022

Online retailer Amazon has announced that they have reached an agreement with Visa that will allow customers to use Visa cards on Amazon sites worldwide without additional fees.

The companies also agreed to collaborate on product and technology initiatives for "innovative payment experiences", Visa said on Thursday.

Credit card fees have been a growing source of tension between Amazon and Visa.

Last year, Amazon started charging customers in Australia and Singapore who use Visa credit cards a 0.5% surcharge.

Under the agreement, Amazon's amazon.co.uk site in Britain will no longer turn off Visa credit cards. Customers in Australia and Singapore will no longer pay the surcharge for using Visa.

Last month, Amazon's British website backed away from plans to stop accepting Visa credit cards issued in the UK, saying the two sides were talking.

Amazon had announced the move in November, blaming "the high fees Visa charges for processing credit card transactions".

Any credit card transaction involves various fees, such as an "interchange fee" that the shopper's bank pays to the retailer's bank and other costs like service and technology charges.

It was not clear which fee was the focus of the UK dispute.

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