Search Travel Market Report

mainlogo
www.travelmarketreport.com
U.S.A.
English
Canada
English
Canada Quebec
Français
  • News
  • Packaged Travel
  • Cruise
  • Hotels & Resorts
  • Destinations
  • Retail Strategies
  • Air
  • River Cruise
  • Training & Resources

Credit Card Blues: Relief in Sight for Int’l Travelers

by Fred Gebhart  November 06, 2013

Credit card issuers are quietly changing the ways card payments are accepted and verified, a trend that is good news for travel managers and business travelers whose itineraries include Europe.

Chip and PIN charge cards, which use an embedded computer chip rather than the traditional magnetic strip, are creeping into the U.S.

Chip and PIN cards have been standard in Europe for nearly a decade, creating a headache for U.S.-based travelers who do business there. U.S. travelers regularly report that their cards are declined by European merchants because they don’t have an embedded chip.

“All European merchants are obliged to accept cards that have only a magnetic stripe, like most U.S. cards. But that doesn’t mean that all of them do,” said Kevin Kane, CTP, managing director and head of sales, global treasury management, BMO Harris Bank.

Fear of fraud
Merchants’ concerns about credit card fraud is the prime reason many don’t accept magnetic-stripe cards. Chip and PIN cards, which require the customer to enter a PIN code to complete a transaction, “ are much more secure than magnetic stripe cards,” he explained.

Card issuers have seen a greater than 70% drop in credit card fraud since the introduction of chip and PIN, said Steve Pedersen, vice president, North American corporate cards, for Bank of Montreal.

Issuers and merchants like that additional security – as do travel managers, who can spend less time on card fraud and more time managing their travelers and program details, Pedersen said.

Barriers to change
So why hasn’t chip and PIN come to the U.S.?

One reason: Although point of sale equipment providers have been building chip readers into card terminals for some time, merchants haven’t wanted to replace their point of sale equipment, Kane said.

Card issuers in other jurisdictions have greater leeway to require specific point of sale technologies and incentivize retailers to switch. In the U.K., for example, chip and PIN was tested in 2003 and rolled out nationwide in 2004.

“Customers with international travel have been recognizing the need for chip and PIN since at least 2006,” Kane said.

For their part, card issuers in the U.S. have been slow to make chip and PIN a standard offering because, until recently, adding a chip raised significant production costs for each card.

Falling costs
Now the combination of falling production costs for chip-enabled cards, rising international travel and international card use and dramatically higher fraud losses on magnetic stripe cards has changed attitudes, Kane said.

BMO rolled out chip and PIN with its Diners’ Club product in 2011. “We have it available with our MasterCard products for customers who need it. So do most other card issuers in the U.S.,” Kane said.

Today, most card issuers will provide corporate chip and PIN cards for free – if asked.

Banks retrofitting ATMs
BMO is in the process of retrofitting all of its automated teller machines in the U.S. with chip readers. The retrofit should be completed by April 2014, Kane said. Other banks are making similar moves.

“The total cost of migration to a more secure payment system in the U.S. will be large,” he said. “But bringing the U.S. up to global standards has a huge benefit. Fraud reductions are funding the rollout. That leaves us more flexibility to enhance profit sharing with companies through their corporate card programs.”

Move to mobile?
Even as card issuers move toward chip and PIN, consumers are moving in another direction – toward mobile payment using smartphones.

Precisely how mobile payment will play out isn’t clear, said Patrick Diemer, chairman and co-managing director of AirPlus International. While there are multiple competing technologies, consumers in Asia and Europe are flocking to mobile payment.

“Mobile wallets and e-wallets will be the ultimate consolidator in payments,” Kane said. “It will be a long, slow transition, particularly in the U.S. But we see mobile payment taking over eventually.”

Next: Experiments in mobile payment and why the U.S. may leapfrog chip and PIN

  
  
Related Articles
Business Travel Remains a Big Opportunity for Small Agencies
U.S. Business Travelers Spend $424 Billion in 2016
American Express GBT Aims At Small Agencies
Marriott Turns Its Focus To Meetings
Airbnb Partners With Amex GBT, BCD and Carlson For The Corporate Market
Business Travelers Get The Chance To Give Back At Marriott
GBTA Forecasts Moderate Growth In Business Travel
Air Canada Briefly Brings Back World Travel Pass
GBTA Reports Little Change in Business Travel in Europe
American Express Forecasts Business Travel 2016

MOST VIEWED

  1. Air Transat Pilots Strike Imminent as Flight Cancellations Begin Before Wednesday Deadline
  2. Jamaica Isn’t Destroyed: Tourism and Resorts Rise Strong after Hurricane Melissa
  3. Finishing Strong: How Travel Advisors Are Closing 2025 to Crush 2026
  4. Sandals Reopens Five Jamaica Resorts Weeks After Hurricane Melissa
  5. 9 New All-Inclusive Resorts in the Caribbean and Mexico Opening in 2026
  6. Black Friday Travel Deals: Sales & Promos Roundup for 2025


TMR Subscription

Subscribe today to receive daily in-depth coverage from all corners of the travel industry, from industry happenings to new cruise ships, hotel openings, tour updates, and much more.

Subscribe to TMR

Top Stories
Corporate Travel Tool Concur To Offer Airbnb Listings

Business travelers will soon have access to Airbnb listings on Concur, making it the only corporate travel booking tool to add Airbnb inventory to its accommodations search. Concur customers will see Airbnb rentals with detailed property information, including ratings and reviews. While listings will appear alongside hotels, differentiated by color on a map. Users will […]

Selecting The Right Venue For Meetings And Events
Selecting The Right Venue For Meetings And Events

Look to these six trends in the MICE industry.

GBTA Offers Training On Planning Corporate Meetings

Brush up on the tools needed to run a successful corporate meetings program.

Memo to Travel Agents: Don’t Overlook Meetings Travel For Growth

With such a large share of meetings travel unmanaged – at small, mid-sized and large enterprises – travel agents shouldn’t overlook the opportunity to build a specialty in corporate groups, experts say.

Egencia Reorganizes And Appoints Two Executives

Egencia has created two new global organizations in a reorganization that also saw the promotion of two company executives.The first organization is focused on “serving clients and driving market share growth,” the company said in a statement, comprising Egencia worldwide Sales and Account Management teams. This organization will be led by Egencia and long-time corporate […]

Majority of Companies Provide Insurance And Assistance To Traveling Employees

A majority of travel professionals report their company provides both travel insurance and other medical and emergency assistance services to their business travelers. According to the study, released by the Global Business Travel Association, 53% of companies offer both travel insurance and assistance, with 95% of them feeling that providing insurance or assistance services is […]

TMR OUTLOOKS & WHITE PAPERS
View All
Advertiser's Voice
Curate Your Client’s Vacation in The Palm Beaches, Florida
About Travel Market Report Mission Meet the Team Advisory Board Advertise Syndication Guidelines
TMR Resources Calendar of Events Outlook/Whitepapers Previous Sponsored Articles Previous This Week Articles
Subscribe to TMR
Select Language
Do You Have an Idea Email
editor@travelmarketreport.com
Give Us a Call
1-(516) 730-3097
Drop Us a Note
Travel Market Report
71 Audrey Ave, Oyster Bay, NY 11771
© 2005 - 2025 Travel Market Report, an American Marketing Group Inc. Company All Rights Reserved | Terms and Conditions
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Manage cookie preferences