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question everything

(52,197 posts)
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 01:05 AM Yesterday

Surcharges Are Suddenly Everywhere--And Grumpy Americans Are Paying Up

An extra 3% for paying with a credit card. A 5% involuntary contribution to a restaurant’s employee wellness fund. $25 a month in addition to rent for trash collection.

Consumers already weary of rising inflation are now contending with a new crop of costs that are hidden in plain sight. New fees or surcharges are popping up everywhere as companies search for ways to recoup their own rising costs while blaming outside pressures.

In recent weeks, package-delivery companies and airlines have announced new or higher fees, citing increasing fuel prices. Economists expect more to follow unless oil prices rapidly fall.

Surcharges increase pressure on consumers, whose spending drives the economy. On Friday, the University of Michigan’s survey of consumers reported its lowest-ever sentiment reading, beating out the 2008 recession and the pandemic, pointing to Americans’ increasing concerns over rising prices.

Yet there is a simple reason why companies like these types of fees, which often don’t show up until a customer is already checking out: They work.

More..

https://www.wsj.com/personal-finance/surcharges-are-suddenly-everywhereand-grumpy-americans-are-paying-up-d5cb0e32?st=Pp2wRf&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

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38 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Surcharges Are Suddenly Everywhere--And Grumpy Americans Are Paying Up (Original Post) question everything Yesterday OP
Kick dalton99a Yesterday #1
This message was self-deleted by its author PeaceWave Yesterday #2
My spouse's dentist added a surcharge because he used credit card! question everything Yesterday #4
This message was self-deleted by its author PeaceWave Yesterday #6
Paper checks work like cash. Demobrat Yesterday #10
Also debit cards. My auto mechanic encourages using them to avoid these charges. question everything 23 hrs ago #21
My dentist does the same. Doctor charges for all cards. Demobrat 19 hrs ago #28
I just use a debit card. They can't charge the 3% if you use them. llmart 1 hr ago #38
Mine (recently retired) didn't take cards. Alice B. Yesterday #17
I guess they don't make enough. demosincebirth Yesterday #12
Look at your checks closely demosincebirth Yesterday #11
Chances are, you encounter it multiple times per week. Torchlight Yesterday #18
Yup. SheltieLover Yesterday #3
Are you all just noticing... róisín_dubh Yesterday #5
it's why I pay in cash Skittles Yesterday #8
I'm shocked I tells ya... róisín_dubh Yesterday #19
I used to pay cash a lot Tree Lady 18 hrs ago #31
Cash whenever possible BeneteauBum 18 hrs ago #32
Here in CA if you use a CC then it is 3% of the balance due. Jacson6 20 hrs ago #24
I needed a plumber this past weekend OnionPatch Yesterday #7
3% for a credit card Old Crank Yesterday #14
I had the appliance guy out for my dishwasher recently. mnhtnbb Yesterday #16
We had guy out to fix ours Tree Lady 18 hrs ago #33
Tell him check today or you'll bring cash tomorrow then order him out. Wonder Why 16 hrs ago #34
Highway robbery. calimary Yesterday #9
The war-criminal's "golden age" is just starting... Justice matters. Yesterday #13
Surcharges make sense for surprise expenses for business Old Crank Yesterday #15
Following Europe's example DFW Yesterday #20
The businesses have to pay a fee for that transaction, so they pass it on. maxsolomon 21 hrs ago #22
Message auto-removed Name removed 20 hrs ago #23
22% at the restaurant I went to on Saturday. maxsolomon 19 hrs ago #25
Message auto-removed Name removed 19 hrs ago #27
Checkout Line Occupancy Fee bucolic_frolic 19 hrs ago #26
They quite literally want to bleed the American public dry clevergrrrl 18 hrs ago #29
"Everything as a service". OC375 18 hrs ago #30
TBH, we WERE warned shanti 14 hrs ago #36
Another symptom, no more "cash over"... dobleremolque 16 hrs ago #35
Surcharges? Aussie105 14 hrs ago #37

Response to question everything (Original post)

Response to question everything (Reply #4)

Demobrat

(10,305 posts)
10. Paper checks work like cash.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 03:24 AM
Yesterday

I carry one in my wallet for just this reason. . Both my dentist and my doctor charge for using cards. So I’m always ready now.

Alice B.

(738 posts)
17. Mine (recently retired) didn't take cards.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 06:47 AM
Yesterday

Also my mechanic charges a fee for using cards.

Torchlight

(6,918 posts)
18. Chances are, you encounter it multiple times per week.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 07:17 AM
Yesterday

Overlooking/not noticing it is one reason the fees are in fact, so effective, so popular and so overused.

róisín_dubh

(12,355 posts)
5. Are you all just noticing...
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 01:27 AM
Yesterday

the credit card surcharges? I’ve noticed them for about 2 years now. Whenever I come back to visit family in the US, and we go to dinner or drinks, the bars and restaurants, in Pennsylvania and New Jersey at least, have added surcharges for credit cards. Debit cards, no. Stupid Capital One just joined with Discover, so my only debit card is now out the window and I have to transfer money constantly…

róisín_dubh

(12,355 posts)
19. I'm shocked I tells ya...
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 07:28 AM
Yesterday

My mom always pays cash (she lives in NJ), or uses her debit card.
We don’t have these surcharges in England. Sure at a random ATM in a dodgy convenience store, perhaps. But you can go to an ATM at any supermarket and take cash out and you don’t get charged either by the machine or your bank. And no credit card surcharges anywhere.

Tree Lady

(13,320 posts)
31. I used to pay cash a lot
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 02:24 PM
18 hrs ago

Then covid came and I switched to using credit card because of germs. Just haven't switched back because I found using my Costco visa for everything gave me more money back end of the year, so staying with that unless fees come up.

Actually wrote a check the other day, having an upholstery guy make a cover for my half moon window and he wanted a check or big fee for using credit card. I had to go home to get check book which gets used about twice a year now.

Jacson6

(2,059 posts)
24. Here in CA if you use a CC then it is 3% of the balance due.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 12:39 PM
20 hrs ago

If you use a debit card there is a flat $0.75 fee.

OnionPatch

(6,331 posts)
7. I needed a plumber this past weekend
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 01:44 AM
Yesterday

for a broken pipe. It cost me $800, which I wasn’t excited about. Then they wanted a 3% surcharge for using my debit card!

Old Crank

(7,146 posts)
14. 3% for a credit card
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 04:06 AM
Yesterday

Makes some sense since the card companies charge the biller about that on average. Debit cards normally have lower fees and the money is transfered faster to the biller.

mnhtnbb

(33,432 posts)
16. I had the appliance guy out for my dishwasher recently.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 05:42 AM
Yesterday

Final bill? $275 labor and service call charges to install a $20. part. On top of that, checks not accepted. So the 3% fee for using a credit card was already locked in. He was here for about an hour.
The water sensor had died, which was causing the dishwasher to stop the cycle when it should proceed to the drying function. Dishwasher is 5 years old.

Tree Lady

(13,320 posts)
33. We had guy out to fix ours
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 02:39 PM
18 hrs ago

Few months ago, real nice. Spring broke and door flopped down. Charged $190 total, I drove to atm real quick while he was fixing it and got cash.

Old Crank

(7,146 posts)
15. Surcharges make sense for surprise expenses for business
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 04:11 AM
Yesterday

They, in theory, would be easier to drop when the cause goes away.
I'm sure that for small businesses they can't absorb the extra costs tacked on by fuel price hikes, tariffs and the like. The only other option is to directly raise prices which won't get lowered should they not need the extra cash later.

DFW

(60,309 posts)
20. Following Europe's example
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 08:27 AM
Yesterday

Europeans have been suffering from this for decades. My mom-in-law's bank once offered her--at age 90, mind you--an "investment" in a 30 year bond of some kind where the fees exceeded the interest earned. My wife was with her, and told the tie-wearing kid at the bank that he was a crook in a suit for even daring to offer such a thing. My wife yelled at him, "do you expect my mother to live to age 120?" He didn't offer much of a coherent answer.

The Europeans tack on fees to just about everything. I guess that when the USA saw that airline passengers didn't revolt with guns and baseball bats at having to pay to check luggage, the rest of the country decided the airlines were on to something.

maxsolomon

(38,877 posts)
22. The businesses have to pay a fee for that transaction, so they pass it on.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 12:00 PM
21 hrs ago

My local Burrito stand has a credit surcharge.

My Mini dealer dropped it because it was pissing customers off to the point they were losing business. 3% on a $2000 car repair bill is not like 3% on a $10 burrito.

Response to question everything (Original post)

maxsolomon

(38,877 posts)
25. 22% at the restaurant I went to on Saturday.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 01:38 PM
19 hrs ago

It was on the menu. And they want a tip on top of that.

Absurd.

Response to maxsolomon (Reply #25)

bucolic_frolic

(55,377 posts)
26. Checkout Line Occupancy Fee
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 01:42 PM
19 hrs ago

"You're standing on my real estate and wearing out the acrylic polish on my cement floor."

clevergrrrl

(180 posts)
29. They quite literally want to bleed the American public dry
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 02:10 PM
18 hrs ago

It seems like the hidden result will be an economy that will grind to a halt and crash.

shanti

(21,801 posts)
36. TBH, we WERE warned
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 06:20 PM
14 hrs ago

about this upcoming "service economy" years ago. But one is never ready until they're slapped upside the head with it.

dobleremolque

(1,122 posts)
35. Another symptom, no more "cash over"...
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 04:41 PM
16 hrs ago

Our grocery chain has ended the ability to get cash-over on the total purchase price of a cartful of groceries. Some other chains are charging a fee ranging from 50¢ to $3, but ours has simply stopped this convenience for its customers.

It makes financial sense the way the store manager explained it: too many people were using the grocery store checkout line as an ATM: coming in to buy a 99¢ pack of gum or a $1.50 bag of ice in order to get $40 cash over on the purchase. The store is charged processing fees on $40.99 on a gross sale of only 99¢, for a financial loss all around.

I guess the only way to get cash out now, without any fee involved, is to use one of our bank's own ATMs.

Aussie105

(8,010 posts)
37. Surcharges?
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 06:42 PM
14 hrs ago

The airlines started that one, now everyone wants a slice of the action.

Is cash King again?

Too easy to stop at an ATM to get cash before you shop.

Some trade people will give you a DISCOUNT for paying cash, because they can keep that income off their books.

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