Dual Pricing For Merchants

What is dual pricing?

Dual pricing (dual, as in two) is a model where a business charges two prices instead of one. A cash price and a card price. It's the same model gas stations have used for 40 years. Cash customers pay less. Card customers pay slightly more (often unnoticeable on a single transaction), which covers the processing fee the merchant would otherwise pay on every card sale. Most businesses that adopt it stop paying $8,000 – $12,000 a year in those fees.

$10,000+ per year Average savings for businesses
doing ~$30K/month in card sales
85%+ of customers Still choose to pay with a card
Legal in all 50 states
Free
No commitment
24-hour turnaround

This is what your customer sees

Two receipts from the same lunch order. One paid in cash, one paid by card.

💳 Card Payment
MAIN STREET DELI
142 Main Street · Portland, OR
03/09/2026 · 12:44 PM · #00847
Items
Turkey Clubx1$13.50
Side Saladx1$4.00
Sparkling Waterx1$2.50
Browniex1$3.00

Subtotal$23.00
Tax (8.5%)$1.96

Non-Cash Adjustment

3.0% applies to card payments.
Pay cash to avoid this charge.

Non-Cash Adj. (3.0%) +$0.75
TOTAL $25.71
VISA ···· 4821$25.71
Auth729401
Thank you!

Questions? (503) 555-0142

💵 Cash Payment
MAIN STREET DELI
142 Main Street · Portland, OR
03/09/2026 · 12:51 PM · #00848
Items
Turkey Clubx1$13.50
Side Saladx1$4.00
Sparkling Waterx1$2.50
Browniex1$3.00

Subtotal$23.00
Tax (8.5%)$1.96

✓ Cash Discount Applied

No adjustment, you saved
$0.75 vs. card payment.

Cash Discount $0.00
TOTAL $24.96
CASH TENDERED$30.00
CHANGE$5.04
Thank you!

Questions? (503) 555-0142

The adjustment is shown before the transaction completes. No surprises. Required by card network rules.

$10K+
Average annual savings for a business doing ~$30K/month in card sales
85%
Of customers still choose to pay with a card when shown the adjustment
50
States where dual pricing is fully legal (with proper disclosure)
PAIR CAN HELP
Too much to take in? Let us handle it.
Skip the homework — get a straight answer about your specific situation, free.
Talk to PAIR →

Is dual pricing legal?

Yes, and it has been for decades. Here’s the legal basis, in plain English.

Quick estimate

How much could dual pricing save you?

No email required. Just a quick, free estimate.

Monthly card volume
$30K
Current rate (approx)
CURRENT MONTHLY COST
$870
per month
WITH PAIR
$185
est. monthly cost
ANNUAL SAVINGS
$8,220
back in your pocket
READY TO CONFIRM?
Get My Personalized Report →
No commitment

This estimate is based on your monthly card volume and current approximate rate. Actual savings depend on your card mix, transaction types, average ticket size, and your processor’s markup. Want the real number from your statement? Get a free audit ↓

PAIR CAN HELP
Too much to take in? Let us handle it.
Skip the homework — get a straight answer about your specific situation, free.
Talk to PAIR →

Dual pricing vs surcharge vs cash discount

Three terms that sound similar but aren’t. The differences matter — legally and practically.

Dual Pricing ⭐SurchargeCash Discount
What the customer seesCash price posted, card adjustment shown at checkoutPosted price + fee added on topDiscount applied if paying cash
Legal statusLegal in all 50 statesRestricted in CT, MA, othersLegal in all 50 states
Customer feelTransparent — feels fairFeels punitiveFeels like a reward
Merchant savings~95% of processing fees recoveredSimilar but riskierSimilar (technically same model)

Is dual pricing right for your business?

Works best for in-person businesses with $10K+ in monthly card volume. Industry by industry:

🍽️

Restaurants

Works well for QSR and counter service. For full-service, consider how you handle tips (most operators apply the adjustment to the pre-tip total).

🛍️

Retail & Boutique

Strong fit. Customers are used to seeing the price before swiping, so the adjustment fits naturally into the existing flow.

💅

Salons & Spas

Near-universal adoption among independents. High average tickets mean meaningful annual savings — often $5K+ per chair.

💪

Fitness & Gyms

Best applied to point-of-sale (drop-ins, retail) rather than recurring membership billing, which has different mechanics.

🏥

Healthcare & Dental

Works for self-pay portions. Insurance billing is unaffected. Common in elective procedures and patient copays.

💻

E-Commerce

Generally not a fit. Cash isn't a payment option, so there's no real choice for the customer to make.

PAIR CAN HELP
Too much to take in? Let us handle it.
Skip the homework — get a straight answer about your specific situation, free.
Talk to PAIR →

What does setup actually cost?

Most merchants are surprised by how lightweight this is.

POS ConfigurationFree if you switch processors. ~$200–$500 to retrofit an existing POS, depending on the system.
SignageRequired by card network rules. Most processors (including PAIR) provide compliant signage free at signup.
Staff Training15 minutes. The POS handles the math — staff just need to know how to explain it if a customer asks.
Time to LiveTypically 5–10 business days from signup to first transaction under dual pricing.
Ongoing costNone. The model pays for itself from day one.

Dual pricing advantages & disadvantages

Advantages
✓ Recover $8K-$12K annually
✓ Fully legal & compliant
✓ 85% customer acceptance rate
✓ No merchant cost increase
Disadvantages
✗ Requires POS configuration
✗ Needs clear signage
✗ Employee training required
✗ Best for $10K+ monthly volume

Real-world impact: dual pricing example

Restaurant processing $30,000/month at 2.9% effective rate:

DUAL PRICING SAVINGS EXAMPLE AT $30K/MONTH
ScenarioMonthly costAnnual cost
Traditional pricing (absorbing fees)$870$10,440
With dual pricing~$49~$588
Annual savings: $9,852
PAIR CAN HELP
Too much to take in? Let us handle it.
Skip the homework — get a straight answer about your specific situation, free.
Talk to PAIR →

FREE · NO OBLIGATION · 24-HR TURNAROUND

Find out what you should actually be paying.

We review your statement, benchmark your effective rate against merchants at your volume, and tell you exactly what’s negotiable — in plain English, within 24 hours.
  • Free statement analysis
  • Line-by-line fee breakdown
  • Industry benchmark comparison
  • Plain-English savings report
Free Audit Form

PAIR logo

Why we built this

Most merchants don't fully understand what they're paying in processing fees — and that's not their fault. The processing space is complicated, the terminology is dense, and good, unbiased information is hard to find. We built PAIR to change that. One resource where merchants can get everything they need to navigate payments, understand their options, find the right plan for their business, and start keeping more of what they earn.

— The PAIR Team

COMMON QUESTIONS

Things merchants always ask

Industry research shows 85% of customers pay with their card without hesitation when the adjustment is properly disclosed. Only 21% said it negatively affected their satisfaction. Most compare it to gas station pricing, which has used this model for 40+ years. The key is clear signage and a POS that shows the adjustment before the swipe — surprises are what make customers angry, not the adjustment itself.

The data says no. Merchants tracking customer counts before and after implementation typically see no measurable change in foot traffic or repeat customers. The few customers who object usually switch to cash rather than leave.

Card network rules require clear signage at the entrance and point of sale stating that a non-cash adjustment applies to card payments. Your processor provides compliant signage. The POS also displays the adjustment on screen before the customer commits to the transaction.

Most dual pricing implementations exempt debit cards. Debit interchange is federally capped and already low (~0.05% + $0.22), so debit customers typically pay the cash price. This is standard practice and most customers appreciate it.

Typically 2.5–3.5%, reflecting actual processing costs. Card network rules prohibit the adjustment from being used as a profit center — it has to approximate what you actually pay. Compliant programs handle this automatically.

No. Your revenue is your revenue regardless of how customers pay. Dual pricing changes the line items on the receipt, not your tax reporting. Talk to your accountant about how to categorize the non-cash adjustment on your books (most treat it as a fee offset).

Most processor contracts allow you to switch to dual pricing without penalty since you're staying with them. If you're switching processors AND moving to dual pricing, early termination fees may apply — though many new processors will cover those fees if the savings are large enough.

Find out what you should actually be paying.
Free · No obligation · Plain-English report · 24-hour turnaround
Start My Free Audit →