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It’s a shame the NZ market hates credit cards so much. In the UK they are widely accepted - as in I struggle to think of a shop that didn’t accept them. Including dairies and food trucks (thanks Square!).

Btw I find it weird that EFTPOS cards have no annual fee, but debit cards do, but some credit cards don’t (eg ASB Visa Light has no ongoing fees).

I sometimes have to pay £1 via card when in a shop activating a service like a monthly phone plan. The £1 is just to validate the card details I gave. They then give me a £1 coin back. I always pay with the credit card, even for such a small amount- because it’s the banks money, not mine, and the bank will always take care of their money more carefully than your own.



In New Zealand, the local EFTPOS network is basically a home-grown network that the major NZ banks established in the 1980s's and have continued operating on a shoe-string budget ever since. For the most part merchants only have to pay a low fixed cost to access the network, whereas customers usually don't pay a fee (as most banks either bundle free EFTPOS transactions in a fixed monthly fee package or even offer it for free entirely for certain account products).

Visa/Mastercard on the other hand has Merchants paying 1-3% of all transactions as well as customers paying an annual fee (usually around $25 or so for standard non-reward cards but can go up to hundreds of dollars for higher end cards) for many card products (so a tidy profit from the merchants as well as some annual top-up from the customers).

From a typical New Zealand merchant's perspective it doesn't always make sense to offer Visa/Mastercard if they can decide to only accept EFTPOS cards (which almost everyone in New Zealand has) and keep the 1-3% that they would otherwise lose to Visa/Mastercard.

Visa/Mastercard offer more modern benefits (e.g. Paywave) which is not offered by EFTPOS which I suspect is partly due to the fact New Zealand's EFTPOS network does not generate much of its own income (just the small fees merchants pay to access the network I believe) so they just continue with the minimum amount of investment.

Personally I have an zero-fee American Express card that earns Air New Zealand Airpoints. As a fallback at merchants that don't accept Amex, I have a Wise (ex TransferWise) Mastercard on my phone (for NFC payments) as well as a physical Kiwibank Visa card. When none of these are accepted I fall back on to my EFTPOS card which is more or less on par with cash in New Zealand. I estimate around 50% of my expenses are on Amex, 10% on Visa/Mastercard and the balance through EFTPOS with the occasional cash for markets and the like.


Kiwi here too, just one of the many in the UK. EFTPOS was great for its time, and yes the low fees are great, but I can’t but wonder about the security of a magstripe compared to a chip. Magstripes are long gone in Europe. Which reminds me- Revolut has great security controls, can enable/disable magstripe, so can disable until until you are in a shop that needs it still, like many places in the US.

That’s why I love Apple Pay (I’ve got UK & NZ bank cards on it, Wise & Revolut too). Now when going out for a local shop I often only take my phone and keys, no need for a bulky (or slim) wallet. Drivers license only if I expect to buy alcohol (and 90% of the time I could have left it at home).

Edit: Also to add, if the pandemic ended up hitting NZ the way it did in the UK/Europe/US, you would see a far higher uptake in contactless payments methods. I dislike touching pin pads now unless I absolutely have to!


>In New Zealand, the local EFTPOS network is basically a home-grown network that the major NZ banks established in the 1980s's and have continued operating on a shoe-string budget ever since. For the most part merchants only have to pay a low fixed cost to access the network, whereas customers usually don't pay a fee (as most banks either bundle free EFTPOS transactions in a fixed monthly fee package or even offer it for free entirely for certain account products).

Sounds exactly like Interac in Canada. Although nowadays I believe most if not all Interac debit cards are also co-branded as MasterCard/Visa debit. Which makes em usable online as well. (There is a Interac online but only a small small small handful of sites even support it.)




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