The annual fee, or membership fee, is an amount
charge card companies levy for the right to use or carry their card.
This fee is payable whether you actually use the card during the year or
not. Annual fees range from an average low of $25 to as much as $100 or
more.
Annual fees were first popularized by
prestige charge cards such as American Express and Diner’s Club. These
annual charges were called Membership Fees. The charge card companies
justified these fees because card holders were required to pay their
balances in full every month and the companies earned no interest from
the balances due.
The annual fee made the leap from club
cards to the ordinary bank card in 1980 after the U.S. Government
imposed a temporary moratorium on the solicitation of new customers for
bank card companies. This was done in the hopes of cutting runaway
inflation. The card issuers saw this as a chance to earn more money from
their existing customer base who suddenly found themselves without any
options thanks to the hastily passed government initiative.
After the moratorium was lifted, card
users left the fee in place with a justification that annual fees kept
interest rates low because it provided a way for the banks to offset
losses from fraud and the rising number of personal bankruptcy claims.
There was little outcry from the public and business went on as usual.
The first sign of trouble on the
horizon came in 1990 when long-distance giant AT&T (American
Telephone and Telegraph) entered the credit card industry with the hopes
of offsetting their declining long distance revenues. Looking to raise
the visibility of their new card in an already crowded marketplace,
AT&T made a big advertising splash with their “No Annual Fee Credit
Card!”
The response from consumers was
overwhelming and the panic spread quickly through competing banks that
were seeing their long-time credit card customers defect to upstart
AT&T. That one incident, which bankers still call “The Big Scare”,
marked the beginning of the end of the annual fee for most people.
Today, American Express still charges
their membership fees although some of their interest-bearing products
come fee-free. Most banks issue fee-free credit cards to their customers
with high credit scores and save the fee-based offers for lower scoring
customers and customers with scores so low that they can only qualify
for secured cards.
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