fbpx

The Inevitable Rise of Contactless Payments

Investopedia defines contactless payments as a secure method for consumers to purchase products or services via debit, credit or smartcards (also known as chip cards), by using RFID technology or near-field communication (NFC). When making a contactless payment, the user taps their card near a point-of-sale terminal. This type of transaction is frictionless and fast, as no PIN or signature is required.

How does contactless payment work?

Contactless credit and debit cards use a combination of traditional EMV chips, along with a contactless chip and RFID antenna. In the case of digital wallets, the smartphone contains a pair of chips, one that accesses and encrypts the card information, and the other, a near-field communication chip that transmits the card data to complete the transaction. The digital wallet is installed on a mobile device, enabling users to manage funds and pay with their credit card accounts.

Tap-and-pay worldwide

Europe is the global leader in the use of contactless cards with nearly one in two transactions contactless. In the UK, the number of contactless transactions rose by 31% in 2018 when compared to the previous year. According to the UK Trade Association, eight out of ten debit cards and six out of ten credit cards are contactless today. The use of contactless cards has received a major boost in the UK since 2015, when the London Transport System began accepting contactless payments.

In Canada and CEMEA (Central Europe, Middle East and Africa), nearly 60% of face-to-face transactions are concluded with a tap. In Asia Pacific, contactless payments constitute more than one-third of face-to-face transactions.

Contactless payments in the US

Up until recently, the US has lagged behind Europe when it comes to contactless payments. However, at the end of May, New York became the first US city to enable subway and bus riders to start tapping a contactless bank card or their mobile wallet to pay fares. The adoption of tap-and-pay technology in cities like Boston, Chicago and San Diego should give contactless payment further impetus.

Issuers jump on the bandwagon

Visa has announced that it expects 100 million of its cards to be contactless by the end of this year. The network’s real-time debit service Visa Direct is said to be driving usage and expanding use cases and geographies.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. stated that it has already issued 20 million contactless Visa credit cards as part of a rollout that began earlier this year. The bank added that tap-and-go debit cards will be on offer later in the year. Wells Fargo and Bank of America are also expected to start issuing tap-and-pay cards in 2019.

Payment ease reigns supreme

The rising popularity of contactless payments is inevitable, and is certainly not a passing trend. Today’s customers demand easy payments as a matter of course. As they carry their smartphones everywhere and utilize them for multiple purposes, it only makes sense that they will aspire to use them to complete transactions with super fast checkouts and a single tap. So contactless will definitely play a major role in payments in the years to come.     

SHARE >

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Care to comment?

Recent Posts

C2C

The C2C (Consumer-to-Consumer) business model involves transactions between two consumers. This

Read More »

B2B

B2B, which stands for Business-to-Business, refers to commerce between two enterprises

Read More »

Follow Us

Facebook Page: Please enter a valid URL

End-to-end payment capabilities anywhere, anytime.