16a-2-403. No person or retailer doing business in any sales, service or lease transaction with a customer may impose a surcharge on a customer who elects to use a credit card as payment unless such person or retailer discloses the amount of such a surcharge through a clear and conspicuous notice to the customer at the point of entry or the point of sale and in advance of such transaction.
History: L. 1986, ch. 90, § 2; L. 1999, ch. 107, § 17; L. 2010, ch. 64, § 1; L. 2024, ch. 6, § 51; January 1, 2025.
KANSAS COMMENT, 2010
1. This section, which is not part of the uniform act, prohibits surcharges for the use of credit cards in sales and lease transactions. The concept of a "surcharge" assumes the existence of a regular price, or norm against which the surcharge can be measured. Presumably, any extra charge which increases the regular price to a credit card customer would be a surcharge. This is the definition used in the TILA; the term "regular price" is defined in TILA, 15 U.S.C. § 1601(x) as the tag or posted price.
Under this section, as under the TILA, surcharges are distinguished from discounts and, discounts for using cash are permitted. See TILA, 15 U.S.C. § 1666f; Kan. A.G. Op. No. 86-115. As a practical matter, there is no difference between posting a price for gasoline, for example, of $1.00 per gallon and offering a discount of 4 cents to cash purchasers, and posting a price of 96 cents per gallon and imposing a surcharge of 4 cents to credit card purchasers. Either way, the cash purchaser pays 96 cents and the credit card purchaser pays a dollar. Yet under this section, one practice is legal and the other is not. Abuse or manipulation of this rule might be a deceptive trade practice under the KCPA.
2. Under 15 U.S.C. § 1666f, discounts offered for inducing payment by cash instead of credit card are not to be considered finance charges for purposes of state usury laws. This means that such discounts need not be figured into the calculations for purposes of determining whether a creditor exceeds the rate limits imposed by the U3C. TILA 15 U.S.C. § 1666f requires that discounts be offered to all prospective buyers and that their availability be disclosed clearly and conspicuously; compliance with this rule exempts such discounts from the finance charge disclosure provisions of the TILA.
Attorney General's Opinions:
Disclosure; discounts for cash purchases. 86-115.
CASE ANNOTATIONS
1. State was unable to show that statute prohibiting credit card surcharges was tailored to an asserted substantial state interest in lowering the amount of credit card debt, encouraging cash payments and preventing fundamental unfairness to consumers. CardX, LLC v. Schmidt, 522 F. Supp. 3d 929 (D. Kan. 2021).
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