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Will Your Business be Keying More Credit Card Transactions as a Result of COVID-19?

Blog Post

In this hectic time and uncertainty, owners are making hard decisions regarding their businesses. Some are shutting down, while others are adapting to the daily life changes of COVID-19. Many medical practices are seeing patients on an emergency basis and others are starting to implement a telehealth approach.

For practices that are considering implementing telehealth to connect with their patients, we'd like to share some guidance. Most practices that have a merchant account in place, may want to consider how best to accept payments over the phone. It is important to arrange payment for the copayment before advising your patient. This can be done over the phone. Basic knowledge and advice are as follows:

Face to face merchant accounts are less risky to the bank and therefore have lower pricing. What many owners do not know, is once a transaction is keyed, the cost of doing so could be one to two percent higher than expected. You should be aware of this additional cost, as it will impact your business’ bottom line. Think of it this way, for every ten thousand dollars keyed, the cost could be an additional two hundred dollars.

You can learn from other businesses who experienced a model change. When your local pizzeria decided to start delivery as part of their business, many never considered that their business model changed from roughly ten percent keyed transactions, to over forty percent. This change in business caused their processing rates to skyrocket, and in some cases, the processor closed their merchant account, because of the additional risk involved. Please avoid this disruption in business and contact your current processor before implementing your new keyed environment for accepting credit card payments.

5 things to consider when adopting a credit card-not-present environment:

  1. Contact your current processor and notify them that your business model is changing. Ask them what impact keying transactions will have on your transaction costs. If you feel you might be keying more than thirty percent of the transactions, having a second merchant account for keyed transactions is an option to help reduce costs. If the processor knows you are keying transactions in their underwriting profile, the business is rewarded with lower pricing.
  2. Make sure you are capturing the proper credit card data for address verification. This includes the number of the street address and zip code for the credit card billing location. Additionally, you will need the three-digit CVV code on the back of the patient’s credit card.
  3. Never save this data on the patient’s file. Doing so will increase your scope of PCI Compliance. You are never allowed to store the three-digit CVV number. 3. The Address verification system is a tool that is better known as AVS. When you contact your processor, please make sure they have this tool active in their software. This tool is used for keyed transactions and helps validate the card information is linked to the address of the card user.
  4. Having the proper information helps eliminate fraudulent transactions and lowers the transaction cost. Review your annual PCI compliance. Accepting payments over the phone requires additional PCI compliance steps to help safeguard your patient’s credit card data. Traditionally, merchants that process face to face transactions using a credit card terminal need to perform an annual self-assessment questionnaire (SAQ) B or B-IP.
  5. Card-not-present merchants must complete an SAQ A or C-VT. Knowing this compliance change will help safeguard you against a possible PCI breach.

Make sure your hardware or software is set up properly to accept keyed transactions. We recommend using a virtual terminal that encrypts and tokenizes the credit card data. This technology is called vaulting and eliminates the need to write down the patient’s credit card data on paper or storing it in spreadsheets. Using this type of technology reduces the scope of your PCI compliance audit. Additionally, the vault can be used to store patient card data for future payments. Lastly, please do not have your patient send their card data through an email or text. These communication methods are not secure. Safeguarding your patient’s payment data should be your number one concern.

Many owners are asking if they can charge the patient to help cover the additional cost of accepting credit cards. The answer is yes, but there are regulations that you must follow to be compliant. The process of charging your patient for credit card acceptance is called surcharging.

Here are the core regulations to consider if you want to surcharge your patients:

  1. As of January 27, 2013, surcharging was made legal. Merchants are required to notify Visa, and their acquirer, 30 days before surcharging.
  2. Surcharging is available in 46 states, as of this writing. You are not permitted to surcharge in CO, CT, MA, and KS.
  3. Surcharging is only allowed for credit card transactions. Debit and prepaid cards cannot be surcharged. This includes HSA and FSA cards.
  4. The surcharge must not be more than your cost of credit card acceptance and is capped at 4%.
  5. Patients must be properly notified that you are adding a surcharge. Visa has specific guidelines for this.
  6. Itemization of the final surcharge amount must be identified separately on the transaction receipt.

The CardChoice team is available for any of your questions or concerns, regarding credit card acceptance, as all of us are working through the COVID-19 pandemic. As a reminder, the World Health Organization has reiterated, you should wash your hands, including after handling money, especially if handling food. It is also recommended, when accepting credit cards in person, use contactless equipment to process the transaction. You may reach CardChoice International at 866-350-3200, Ext. 2248, support@cardchoice.com. 


Invitation to Banks & Family Office/Ultra-high Net Worth Investors Exploring Cannabis Lending to Join Our Informal Institutional Cannabis Lenders Community

An update on the latest developments in the cannabis banking/lending space by subject matter expert, BMD Scottsdale/Phoenix Office Managing Partner Stephen Lenn

Community Banks: Collaboration, not isolation, is the key to protecting/ enhancing the cannabis business you pioneered

As we prepare for the plenary session of the informal institutional cannabis lenders community announced in my previous article, I am pleased to advise that participants now include 5 of the best-known dedicated loan funds; a select group of commercial banks ranging in size from single state community banks to mid-size regionals making cannabis loans into the mid-8 figures; and, a syndicator of credit union cannabis loans.

Non-compete Agreements are Under Fire: What Employers Need to Know

Non-compete agreements are an ongoing topic of dispute. Employers and their advocates point to the efficacy of non-competes in protecting proprietary information. Employees and their advocates argue about worker mobility and that employers unduly burden workers’ ability to seek better jobs. The Biden administration has put forth its position, and state legislatures have introduced bills addressing the enforceability of non-competes. Here is what you need to know:

BMD’s Jason Butterworth Quietly Engineers Some of Akron’s Most Impactful Projects

Jason Butterworth, a team member of BMD’s Business & Corporate practice, focuses his practice on finance, real estate, and tax credit law.

Explosive Growth in Pot of Gold Opportunity for Bank (and Other) Cannabis Lenders Driving Erosion of the Barriers

Our original article on bank lending to the cannabis industry anticipated that the convergence of interest between banks and the cannabis industry would draw more and larger banks to the industry. Banks were awash in liquidity with limited deployment options, while bankable cannabis businesses had rapidly growing needs for more and lower cost credit. Since then, the pot of gold opportunity for banks to lend into the cannabis industry has grown exponentially due to a combination of market constraints on equity causing a dramatic shift to debt and the ever-increasing capital needs of one of the country’s fastest growing industries. At the same time, hurdles to entry of new banks are being systematically cleared as the yellow brick road to the cannabis industry’s access to the financial markets is being paved, brick by brick, by the progressively increasing number and size of banks that are now entering the market.