What is Dual Pricing?

What is Dual Pricing? — Definition & Guide
Dual pricing is a payment processing model where merchants display two separate prices at the point of sale — a cash price and a card price. The card price is set higher than the cash price by the cost of card acceptance, so when a customer pays by card, the merchant’s processing fees are covered by the price differential. Both prices are shown simultaneously before the customer selects a payment method.
In simple terms, it’s two prices on one tag. A merchant sets their desired net revenue as the cash price, then adds the processing cost on top to arrive at the card price. A coffee shop might show $4.00 cash / $4.12 card. A contractor might invoice $2,000 cash / $2,060 card. The customer sees both prices upfront and chooses how to pay — no surprise fee at checkout.
What makes this model different from a cash discount or surcharge is the timing and transparency. Both prices are visible from the start — on menus, shelf labels, terminals, and receipts. The customer makes an informed choice before paying. There’s no base price that gets modified at checkout, which is what makes it fully compliant with card network rules and legal in all 50 states.
The Visa rules for merchants on pricing display provide the compliance framework that governs how this must be implemented at the point of sale.
Here is the flow of a typical transaction under this model:
The terminal must be configured to automatically apply the correct price based on payment method. When a customer taps or dips a card, the card price is charged. When they pay cash, the lower price applies. No manual staff calculation is required — it’s handled at the terminal level.
These three programs achieve a similar outcome — near-zero net processing cost — but they differ in structure and compliance requirements:
- Two-price display — shows both prices simultaneously before payment. Legal in all 50 states. Applies to all card types including debit.
- Cash discount — posts the card price as the standard price and offers a discount to cash payers at checkout. Also legal in all 50 states. Applies to all card types.
- Surcharge — adds a fee to credit card transactions on top of a base price. Restricted in some states. Applies to credit cards only — debit cannot be surcharged.
The biggest advantage of the two-price approach over the other two is maximum upfront transparency — customers see both options before committing to a payment method, which reduces friction and complaints at the register.
For the underlying federal framework governing consumer card-payment disclosures and protections, see CFPB guidance on credit card consumer protections.
This model works best for in-person businesses where prices can be displayed on menus, shelf labels, or signage. Strong fits include:
- Retail — shelf labels and POS screens show both prices clearly
- Restaurants — menus list both cash and card prices per item
- Service businesses — invoices display both price options before work begins
- Healthcare — patient-facing price displays show both payment options
It’s less practical for e-commerce businesses where cash isn’t an option, or for businesses with complex variable pricing where updating two prices for every item is operationally difficult.
It’s a model where merchants display two prices — a cash price and a card price — simultaneously at the point of sale. The card price covers the processing fee, so the merchant nets the same amount regardless of how the customer pays.
No. A surcharge adds a fee on top of a single posted price — only for credit cards and only in states where it’s permitted. This model displays two separate prices from the start, applies to all card types, and is legal in all 50 states. Card network rules and state laws treat them differently.
Yes — it is legal in all 50 states when both prices are clearly disclosed before the transaction. This is one of its key advantages over surcharging, which is restricted in California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Maine.
Yes. Many restaurants list both prices on menus or display them at the POS terminal. Both must be shown before the customer orders — not just at the register. Proper disclosure on receipts and signage is also required.
Dual Pricing Eliminates Most Processing Costs Legally. The Rules Are Specific and Card-Brand-Compliant.
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