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Europe has a legal cap (0.9%) on the fee the credit card companies charge to the merchants. In the US there is no limit, so merchants get hammered with fees of ~3—5%. US credit cards often offer a 1% kickback to cardholders for using their card. Some credit cards offer as much as 5% as a kickback on certain categories of purchases, like groceries. Some credit cards also charge a zero percent markup on foreign currency exchange.

So if you use a forex-free card with rewards in Europe on a purchase that has a rebate that exceeds 1%, the merchant only absorbs 0.9% of the cost. The bank loses 4.1% on a 5% rebate.

Or am I missing something? The bank obviously still profits from purchases in categories with a lower rebate, and late fees and interest.. but of course only if you make that happen.

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[-] some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 1 month ago

Thanks for reminding me to make a payment. I keep that shit pre-paid, so to speak, so the balance due was zero, but I'm vigilant about never letting it cost me money. Paid off the smallish amount that was accruing because fuck my bank.

this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2025
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