Credit card processing fees can quietly drain thousands of dollars from your business every year. Between interchange, assessments, and processor markups, it’s no surprise that merchants are looking for ways to reduce or eliminate the cost of accepting cards.
Two of the most effective strategies are cash discounting and credit card surcharging. While both help offset processing fees, they operate differently, have different compliance requirements, and can impact customer perception in different ways.
This guide breaks down the key differences, including updated rules, compliance information, and a link to the latest legal guidance from NFIB, so you can confidently choose the best solution for your business.
What Is a Cash Discount Program?
A cash discount program encourages customers to pay with cash by offering a lower price at checkout. The posted price is the “card price,” and customers who pay with cash receive an instant discount.
How It Works
- Your posted price = price for card customers
- Cash-paying customers receive a discount
- The discount helps offset or eliminate processing fees
Is a Cash Discount Legal?
Yes. Cash discount is legal in all 50 states, as long as:
- The posted price is the card price
- The discount is clearly shown on the receipt
- Signage is properly displayed
Why Businesses Choose Cash Discounting
- Can eliminate up to 100% of credit card processing fees
- Simpler compliance
- Easy for customers to understand
- Improves cash flow
- Works with both credit and debit cards
If your goal is zero processing fees, cash discounting is typically the best choice.
→ Read our full article about What Is Dual Pricing and Cash Discounting?
What Is a Surcharge?
A surcharge is a fee added to a transaction only when a customer pays with a credit card. This fee helps offset the cost of processing that credit card.
How It Works
- A surcharge (usually 3–4%) is added to credit card transactions
- Debit cards cannot be surcharged
- Requires strict compliance and advance notice to card networks
Is Surcharging Legal?
Surcharging is legal in many U.S. states, but a few states restrict or prohibit it.
To stay compliant, you must:
- Notify your processor + card brands (typically 30 days before starting)
- Post required signage
- Only surcharge credit (never debit)
- Keep the surcharge below the allowed cap
Want to Review Legalities Yourself?
The National Federation of Independent Business provides an updated legal guide here
Cash Discount vs. Surcharge: What’s the Real Difference?
| Program Type | Added Fee? | Who Pays? | Legal in All States? | Works With Debit? |
| Cash Discount | No | Card users pay the full posted price; cash users receive a discount | Yes | Yes |
| Surcharge | Yes, fee is added to credit card transactions | Credit card users | Varies by state | No |
Quick Summary
- Cash discount = a “reward” for paying with cash
- Surcharge = a “fee” added to credit payments
The difference may feel subtle, but legally and operationally, it matters.
Which Saves You More Money? Cash Discount vs. Surcharge
Let’s say you process:
- $40,000/month in credit volume
- Effective rate: 3.2%
- Approx. fees: $1,280/month or $15,360/year
With Cash Discounting:
You keep all $40,000.
Total fees = $0
Annual savings = $15,360
With Surcharging:
You offset fees for only credit transactions.
Debit still costs you money.
You typically save 60–80% of fees.
Winner?
Cash discounting almost always delivers maximum savings.
PCI, Compliance & Required Signage
Both programs require PCI compliance, but surcharging adds more complexity.
Cash Discount Compliance
- Posted prices must reflect the card price
- The discount must be clearly listed on the receipt
- Entry & point-of-sale signage required
- No registration with card networks
Surcharge Compliance
- Must notify Visa/Mastercard 30 days in advance
- Cannot surcharge debit (even when run as credit)
- Must follow strict receipt and signage rules
- Fee cannot exceed cap (usually 4%)
- Must comply with state-specific surcharge laws
If you don’t want to manage legal and network rules, cash discounting is easier and safer.
Customer Reactions: Which Do They Prefer?
Studies consistently show that customers respond more positively to:
✔ Cash discounts
✘ Less positive to surcharges
Cash discounts feel like a benefit, while surcharges feel like a penalty, even though the cost impact is similar.
Industries where cash discounting tends to perform best:
- Gas stations
- Retail
- Convenience stores
- Restaurants
- Service businesses
Which Program Should You Choose? Cash Discount vs. Surcharge
Choose Cash Discounting If You Want:
- Zero processing fees
- Higher margins
- Fewer compliance rules
- Happier customers
→ Read more on Maximizing Profits: The Power of Cash Discounting for Retailers
Choose Surcharging If You Want:
- To charge fees only to credit users
- To maintain lower posted prices
- To match competitors who surcharge
NationalLink Can Help You Stay Compliant and Save More
NationalLink provides fully compliant, customizable programs, including:
- Cash Discount Programs
- Credit Card Surcharge Solutions
- POS Systems
- EMV, NFC & mobile payments
- PCI compliance support
- Transparent reporting
- 24/7 merchant support
Whether you want to eliminate fees or reduce them, we’ll help you choose and implement the best program for your business.
Ready to Reduce or Eliminate Your Processing Fees?
Contact NationalLink today for a consultation and see how much more of your revenue you can keep each month.








