The service is offered by both banks and merchant service providers in countries such as the United Kingdom, Belgium, Canada and The Netherlands because of the fee structures in use in these locales:
Merchants do not offer cashback on payments by credit card because they would pay a percentage commission of the additional cash amount to their bank or merchant services provider.
Some vendors enforce a minimum purchase amount or add a fixed fee when providing cashback to a customer. In many cases, retailers require customers to initial the cashback entry on the till receipt to confirm that they have received the cash. This system is used to prevent cashiers surreptitiously adding cashback amounts to a transaction and keeping the money for themselves (or accusations of same).
Cashback can be useful in many scenarios. In locations where there are no ATMs nearby, or nearby ATMs are out-of-order, a local retailer may be able to supply the required cash instead. Sometimes it is simply more convenient to combine the transactions at the retailer and ATM into a single cashback transaction with the retailer.
Cashback is particularly useful in pubs, where it is usually considered somewhat impolite to pay for each drink (or round, unless very large) with a card. Customers finding themselves without cash can make one payment by debit card, asking also for cash with which to pay for the remainder of the evening.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Debit card cashback".
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