Dual Pricing Education
What Is Surcharging? A Plain-English Definition
Surcharging is when a business adds a small fee to a customer's total at checkout, but only when that customer pays with a credit card. The fee is meant to offset what the business pays to accept credit cards, not to add extra profit. Under card network rules, surcharging can only apply to credit cards (never debit or prepaid cards), the fee generally cannot exceed the business's actual cost of acceptance, and it must be clearly disclosed to the customer before the transaction goes through, both with signage and on the receipt. If you've seen a line item labeled "credit card surcharge" on a bill or at checkout, this is what's happening.

Surcharging vs. the Alternatives
"Surcharging," "dual pricing," "cash discount," and "convenience fee" get used interchangeably online, but they aren't the same thing. Here's how the four compare side by side.
| Model | What it is | Who pays | Must be disclosed? | How the customer feels | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surcharging | A fee added at checkout, only on credit card payments, as a percentage of the sale | The card paying customer | Yes, signage plus receipt disclosure required | Can feel like a penalty if it's a surprise | Retail, restaurants, contractors who want one advertised price |
| Dual pricing | Two prices posted everywhere: a cash price and a slightly higher card price | The card paying customer, built into the posted price | Yes, both prices must be clearly posted | Feels more transparent since there's no added line item | Businesses that want a cleaner checkout experience |
| Cash discount | The card price is the standard price; cash payers get a discount off it | Framed as the cash payer saving money, not the card payer being charged more | Yes, discount terms should be posted | Feels positive, like a discount rather than a penalty | Similar businesses to surcharging, different framing |
| Convenience fee | A flat or percentage fee for using an alternative payment channel (paying a bill online or by phone instead of mail or in person), regardless of card type | The customer who chooses the alternative channel | Yes, disclosed before payment | Generally accepted since it's tied to convenience, not card type | Utilities, government payments, bill-pay portals |
Of the four, dual pricing tends to feel the most transparent to customers because there's no separate fee to explain at the end, just a cash price and a card price shown side by side. For a closer look at how the two compare mechanically, see dual pricing vs surcharging.
How Surcharging Works
- Assessment. A business looks at its card mix, transaction volume, and actual cost of acceptance to decide whether a surcharge program makes sense and what rate it can reasonably support.
- Card-network rules. Visa and Mastercard require a surcharge program to follow specific rules, including a cap on the amount, disclosure at the point of entry and on the receipt, and advance notice to the card networks, which a processor or acquirer typically handles.
- Credit-only detection. The point-of-sale or payment system has to correctly identify card type at swipe, dip, tap, or manual entry, since only credit cards can be surcharged. Debit and prepaid cards must be automatically excluded.
- Ongoing compliance. Rules and caps can change, so a properly run, compliant surcharging program is reviewed periodically rather than set up once and ignored.
Is Surcharging Legal?
In most of the United States, surcharging is legal when it follows card network rules and state disclosure requirements. That said, a few states restrict surcharging or add extra rules, and requirements vary by state and change over time. This section is general information, not legal advice.
If you operate in Indiana, see our dedicated page on is surcharging legal in Indiana for what applies there. This page is for general education only and is not legal or compliance advice; for a determination specific to your business, consult an attorney licensed in your state.
The Customer-Friendly Alternative: Dual Pricing
For business owners who like the idea of offsetting card acceptance costs but don't love the optics of a fee appearing at the register, dual pricing is worth a look. Instead of adding a surcharge line item after the sale is rung up, dual pricing simply posts two prices from the start, a cash price and a card price, so customers see the tradeoff before they decide how to pay. Many merchants find this framing feels less like a penalty and more like a straightforward choice.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get a Free Statement Audit
PayPoint Systems is an independent, Northwest Indiana based merchant services provider that offers surcharging, dual pricing, and traditional processing solutions through Payroc. We don't write the card network rules above, but we can help you apply them correctly and avoid the compliance gaps that get merchants in trouble.
If you're not sure whether surcharging, dual pricing, or a straightforward flat rate fits your business best, start with a free statement audit. We'll review what you're currently paying, in writing, and walk through your options, including a compliant surcharging program if that's the right fit. Request your free statement audit or learn more about merchant services in Northwest Indiana.
This page is for general education only and is not legal or compliance advice; for a determination specific to your business, consult an attorney licensed in your state.
