Ninth Circuit Clears the Way for Surcharges on Credit Card Payments in California
Time 3 Minute Read

On January 3, 2018, in Italian Colors Restaurant v. Becerra, the Ninth Circuit found unconstitutional a California law barring retailers from imposing surcharges on customers using credit cards. The ruling has important implications for retailers operating in California and potentially for retailers operating in several other states with similar bans on credit card surcharges.

Credit card fees are a significant cost to retailers. The typical fee of 2-3 percent can represent a large portion of the profit margin from a sale. Accordingly, retailers have looked for ways to shift the cost of those fees. One strategy is imposing surcharges on purchases made with credit cards. Another is offering discounts on purchases made with any form of payment other than credit cards.

From 1971 to 1984, federal law barred surcharges on credit card purchases. After the federal law expired, several states, including California, enacted their own surcharge bans. Under California Civil Code § 1748.1(a), retailers were not permitted to impose surcharges, but they were allowed to offer discounts for non-credit card payments. Credit card companies also barred surcharges under their agreements, a practice that is the subject of ongoing antitrust litigation.

In 2014, a group of retailers sued the attorney general of California, alleging that the California law violated the Constitution. According to the retailers, the law impermissibly restricted their speech in violation of the First Amendment and was impermissibly vague under the Fourteenth Amendment. The retailers argued that they preferred to impose surcharges rather than offer discounts, because while the two options ostensibly have the same practical effect, customers react to them in different ways. Moreover, using a surcharge rather than a discount allows retailers to display a lower price— i.e., a price that has the “discount” built in, rather than a price reflecting the surcharge.

The district court held, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed, that the California statute regulates speech, not conduct, and cannot survive intermediate scrutiny for evaluating the constitutionality of restrictions on commercial speech. Accordingly, the court struck down the statute and declined to reach the Fourteenth Amendment question.

The Second Circuit, Fifth Circuit and Eleventh Circuit also have addressed whether a surcharge ban regulates conduct or speech—the Second and Fifth said conduct, and the Eleventh said speech. But the Ninth Circuit is the first to address the question since the Supreme Court’s decision in Expressions Hair Design v. Schneiderman, 137 S. Ct. 1144 (2017), which reversed the Second Circuit’s holding that a surcharge ban regulates conduct, and ordered the Second Circuit to analyze the First Amendment challenge. The Supreme Court has also vacated the Fifth Circuit’s decision and denied certiorari in the Eleventh Circuit decision. Those are all good omens for retailers’ ability to impose surcharges on credit card purchases across the country.

Read the full alert.

  • Partner

    Mike has more than 37 years of experience with class actions and other complex cases, including wage-hour class actions and collective actions, consumer products class actions, racketeering (RICO), and labor disputes with unions ...

  • Partner

    Tom is co-head of the firm’s product liability and mass tort litigation practice group. His practice focuses on class action, mass tort and environmental litigation. Tom is a litigator, handling complex civil matters, including ...

You May Also Be Interested In

Time 1 Minute Read

As reported on the Hunton Employment & Labor Perspectives blog, SB 574 is a California bill that would set specific duties for attorneys who use generative artificial intelligence and would restrict how arbitrators may use such tools in decision-making.

Time 1 Minute Read

The California Consumer Privacy Act continues to drive significant enforcement activity—particularly when minors’ data is involved. In a recent action, the California Privacy Protection Agency imposed a $1.1 million fine on youth sports platform PlayOn Sports for alleged violations involving student data and inadequate opt-out mechanisms. The case highlights growing regulatory scrutiny around how companies collect, share, and provide transparency about personal information—especially when schools and students are involved. 

Time 3 Minute Read

The results are in: attorneys are filing more employment law cases in court.  Indeed, year-end reporting from legal databases like LexMachina confirm that the pace of filing new employment discrimination cases reached its highest level in 2025, surpassing 20,000 new filings nationwide.  Though overtime and minimum wage lawsuits under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) have continued to decline since 2015, discrimination cases under laws like Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act are on the rise.

Time 2 Minute Read

On March 3, 2026, the CalPrivacy announced its first enforcement action involving student privacy, requiring PlayOn Sports to pay a $1.10 million fine for alleged violations of the CCPA’s opt-out rights and requirements.

Search

Subscribe Arrow

Recent Posts

Categories

Tags

Authors

Archives

Jump to Page