九一星空无限

ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Up next
ZB

Winston Peters says credit card surcharge ban is ‘going nowhere’

Author
Ethan Griffiths,
Publish Date
Thu, 19 Feb 2026, 9:02pm
Minister of Commerce and Consumer Affairs Scott Simpson says he will have nothing to do with grocery sector regulation.
Minister of Commerce and Consumer Affairs Scott Simpson says he will have nothing to do with grocery sector regulation.

Winston Peters says credit card surcharge ban is ‘going nowhere’

Author
Ethan Griffiths,
Publish Date
Thu, 19 Feb 2026, 9:02pm

The Government鈥檚 ban on card surcharges appears to have stalled 鈥 with New Zealand First leader Winston Peters saying the bill鈥檚 鈥済oing nowhere鈥.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says they鈥檙e 鈥渢aking a breather鈥 on the policy 鈥 while Act鈥檚 leader is talking up concerns from retailers.

But the minister in charge, Scott Simpson, says he鈥檚 not aware of any disagreement in the coalition 鈥 and he鈥檚 still hoping for the ban to be in force by May.

The bill, announced last year, would ban retailers from charging for credit, debit and contactless payments 鈥 meaning businesses would be left to foot the bill.

It鈥檚 been roundly criticised by Retail NZ and various chambers of commerce 鈥 including the Auckland Business Chamber, led by former National Party leader Simon Bridges.

The bill passed its first reading in September, with a select committee reporting back in November.

It鈥檚 been on Parliament鈥檚 order paper since then 鈥 with a second and third reading yet to occur.

Asked whether the Government still plans to progress the bill, Luxon said the bill was 鈥渟till under consideration鈥.

鈥淲e just want to make sure we understand all the implications before we push the final button on it.

鈥淲e want to take a breather and have a think.鈥

Prime Minister Chris Luxon says the Government's 'taking a breather' on the bill. Photo / Marty Melville
Prime Minister Chris Luxon says the Government's 'taking a breather' on the bill. Photo / Marty Melville

Act leader David Seymour said there were significant concerns from businesses.

鈥淚鈥檝e in particular listened to small business people saying we get a million bucks through our card system. A 2% fee we have to eat would be $20,000 and our small business can鈥檛 afford that.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why conversations carry on.鈥

But Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson, who鈥檚 in charge of the bill, didn鈥檛 signal any delays when asked 鈥 saying the bill was simply awaiting second reading amid a busy legislative agenda.

The following day, he provided a statement saying the Government鈥檚 plan to ban surcharges was unchanged.

鈥淭he work is continuing, but it is important for us to consider the feedback received during select committee, and more broadly.

鈥淭his feedback is under consideration now, and we will have more to say on the next steps on this bill in due course.鈥

An hour later, when asked why the bill hadn鈥檛 been progressed, Peters said it was 鈥済oing nowhere鈥.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why it鈥檚 languishing.鈥

But Peters wouldn鈥檛 confirm his party鈥檚 position on the bill.

鈥淲hen it turns up, I鈥檒l tell you about it at the second reading.

鈥淚鈥檒l deal with it when the time comes.鈥

Asked about Peters鈥 comments, Simpson鈥檚 office said he had no further comment.

Retail New Zealand chief executive Carolyn Young said she鈥檇 heard there were 鈥渟ome challenges with the bill going ahead鈥.

She called on the Government to ditch the bill entirely 鈥 and go back to the drawing board and properly consult with merchants.

Bill would force up prices 鈥 officials

Officials at the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) found Kiwis pay between $45 million and $65m a year in surcharges, while the average consumer pays about $35 each year.

They also found consumers are often overcharged: the average surcharge costs double the fee paid by the merchant.

The ministry concluded that removing surcharges from credit, debit and contactless payments would streamline the consumer experience.

But it also found a ban would cause 鈥渕any merchants to respond by raising prices across all consumers鈥, because retailers would be forced to pick up the cost of the fees, especially from high-fee credit cards.

Smaller merchants would bear the brunt of that, struggling to absorb additional costs and 鈥渓eaving them particularly exposed鈥.

It could mean some merchants might stop accepting credit cards entirely.

Officials also found that a ban would affect competition among businesses.

Small businesses are paying fees as high as 2.5% when consumers use Visa or Mastercard cards, but larger businesses have greater negotiating power and often pay much lower fees.

鈥淚t is likely that the competitive position of smaller merchants will weaken relative to bigger competitors,鈥 the briefing said.

The ban would also disproportionately target lower-income shoppers who pay with cash or Eftpos, who would effectively be subsidising those with reward-scheme credit cards that charge retailers higher fees.

Ethan Griffiths is a political reporter with 九一星空无限talk ZB, based in the parliamentary press gallery. He joined 九一星空无限 as a print journalist in 2020, previously working as a general reporter in Whanganui and an Open Justice reporter in the Bay of Plenty and Wellington.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you