The same applies to Canada, virtually all merchants have contactless card 
terminals or pin pads now and you simply tap your chip card or iPhone, 
contactless payments can be  up to $100.
Vancouver Transit recently enabled this on all their faregates for Skytrain 
etc., before you had to purchase a so-called compass card at a machine which 
you would then tap at the gate. During my last trip to Vancouver a few weeks 
ago I simply held my Visa, Mastercard or iPhone up to the panel on the gate and 
it opened. On the iPhone it said that there was a transaction in progress 
because when I walk in it doesn't actually charge anything because the system 
doesn't know how far I travel hence it doesn't know which price to charge. When 
my train arrived and I walked out I again had to tap the gate so it opened for 
me and at that point my Mastercard or Visa, whichever I used either directly or 
via Apple Pay, was charged the correct fare. It's very slick and super 
convenient although if  you travel a lot during one day it's still better and 
cheaper to purchase a compass card day pass which you can then use for 
unlimited use of the Vancouver transit system.
I also rarely use cash any more and at my retail store out of a little over 
$42,500 in sales in March only $6,000 (less than 15%) were cash.

Regards,
Sieghard

-----Original Message-----
From: viphone@googlegroups.com <viphone@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of M. Taylor
Sent: Wednesday, April 24, 2019 6:10 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: The two reasons Apple Pay in the US lags way behind Europe, 9 to 5 Mac

9 to 5 Mac - Wednesday, April 24, 2019 at 7:54 AM

The two reasons Apple Pay in the US lags way behind Europe

When we reported that JC Penney had stopped supporting Apple Pay, some European 
readers were confused about the state of Apple Pay in the US. Why did the chain 
need to specifically support Apple Pay when everywhere in Europe accepts it 
because it’s effectively just another contactless card?

A reader suggested I write an explainer, which I added to my to-do list only to 
find that CNBC did it for me in video form …
 
Contactless payment in Europe
Certainly in London and other major cities, contactless payment is supported 
pretty much everywhere. From major retailers through coffee shops to 
independent corner stores and market stalls. Even some buskers accept 
contactless payment.

If you travel around London, you no longer need an Oyster card – just tap your 
contactless card at the entry gates to tube, DLR, and Overground stations, as 
well as when boarding buses.

For many of us, it’s the default way to pay for even really minor purchases 
like a chocolate bar. It’s the new cash.

Apple Pay in Europe
If a retailer accepts contactless cards (and they pretty much all do), then by 
definition they also accept Apple Pay – because to the card terminal it looks 
just like a contactless card payment.

Indeed, the only Apple Pay-specific aspect is transaction limits.
Contactless cards are limited to a maximum transaction of £30 ($40). That’s 
because contactless payment doesn’t have any kind of validation – anyone can 
just tap a card and it’s done. (There are safeguards, like monitoring for 
unusual payment patterns in order to temporarily block contactless use of a 
suspected stolen card.)

If a payment terminal has specific support for mobile wallet services like 
Apple Pay, then it will recognize the fact that it’s an authenticated payment 
(via Face ID or Touch ID) and apply a much higher transaction limit.
That varies by retailer, but is typically in the order of around £700 ($900).
Certainly I’ve made purchases costing several hundred pounds using Apple Pay, 
so it’s not only more secure than a contactless card, but more useful too.

Apple Pay in the US
So if Apple Pay is accepted everywhere in Europe, why isn’t that the case in 
the US?
As CNBC notes, it isn’t an Apple Pay-specific issue, but rather that there is 
still limited support for contactless among US retailers. Where they do offer 
contactless payment, then – just as in Europe – Apple Pay ought to work whether 
or not it is explicitly supported.

There are two reasons contactless hasn’t taken off as well in the US. First, 
most European countries have a relatively small number of major banks, so 
there’s not too much coordination needed to persuade them to adopt new 
technologies. And once the major banks do it, smaller ones have no choice but 
to follow.

That’s different in the US. There are many more banks and credit unions, and 
none are so dominant that everyone else has to follow their example.
Chip-and-PIN is another example of a payment technology that is taking a very 
long time to take off in the US, while it’s been the norm in Europe for more 
than a decade.

Second, debit card payment was already the norm in Europe. People just wanted a 
faster and more convenient way to do it for lower-value transactions – and 
contactless payment was the answer.

It’s different in the US. There, cash is still king. For example, 55% of all 
transactions below $10 are made by cash, while in the UK that hasn’t been true 
since 2017.

So that’s why Apple Pay in the US is still rolling out rather slowly.
As for JC Penney, it seems they switched off support for all contactless 
payment for reasons known only to themselves.

The irony is most new-ish payment terminals already support contactless – it 
simply needs the retailer to enable it. So if yours hasn’t yet done so, keep
asking: it may be as simple as them tapping a few buttons.

Original Article at: 
https://9to5mac.com/2019/04/24/apple-pay-in-the-us/


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