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A Gift Card Holder's Bill of
Rights
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Gift cards should not have expiration
dates.
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The value of gift cards should not be
reduced by arbitrary fees that diminish a card’s value.
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Fees assessed on a card purchase
should not exceed five dollars or ten percent of the value of the
card, whichever is less.
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Card replacement fees should not
exceed two dollars or ten percent of the purchase price of the card,
whichever is less.
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Cards with a balance of five dollars
or less should be redeemable for cash with no fee.
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Balance inquiries should not deduct
from the value of the card.
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Terms and conditions should be clearly
disclosed.
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Unused funds should not go into the
card issuers’ pockets, but should accrue to a state fund to be used
for the specific benefit of consumers.
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Funds from the sale of gift cards
should be segregated and held in trust accounts so as to be
automatically honored in the event of the cards issuer’s bankruptcy.
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These rights should cover any
electronic gift card with a banked dollar value.
Gift cards should have
no expiration dates.
Gift card holders have the expectation
that their cards are as good as cash at a retailer. They should be
able to use their cards regardless of when they received the card
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The value of a gift
cards should not be reduced by arbitrary fees that diminish a card’s
value.
The funds available on gift cards are
often reduced significantly by a variety of postsale fees (called
“dormancy,” “inactivity,” or “maintenance” fees, depending on the
card) if the value of the card has not been exhausted within six to
12 months of purchase. We believe the funds stored in these
cards should be available to consumers to pay for goods and
services, not the card issuer’s administrative costs.
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Fees assessed on a card
purchase should not exceed five dollars or ten percent of the value of
the card.
The processing charges or sales fee
charged at the point of sale for gift cards should be reasonable and
consistent with the expected costs incurred by the card issuer to
market the card and service the card post-sale.
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Card replacement fees
should not exceed two dollars or ten percent of the purchase price of
the card, whichever is less.
Card holders lose cards for a variety
of reasons, including theft. Fees associated with replacing the card
should be reasonable.
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Cards with a balance of
five dollars or less should be redeemable for cash with no fee.
Many cards are unusable when consumers
attempt to use them to make purchases greater than the value of a
card. Many retailers are unable or unwilling to attempt a “split
tender” transaction to address this issue. As such, we believe that
consumers should be able to redeem gift cards with a remaining value
of $5 or less for cash, without a fee.
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Balance inquiries should
not deduct from the value of the card.
Consumers may need to check the
remaining balance on their cards from time to time. Doing so should
not reduce the value of the card itself.
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Terms and conditions
should be clearly disclosed.
Consumers should be made aware of any
fees associated with a card before purchasing it. Such terms and
conditions should be viewable on the card itself, the card’s
packaging, in-store display, and on an easily accessible Web site.
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Unused funds should not
go into the card issuers’ pockets, but should accrue to a state fund to
be used for the specific benefit of consumers.
The residual value of lost or unused
cards falling under states’ unclaimed property laws should be used
to benefit consumers, not to the bottom lines of big banks and
retailers. Appropriate uses of such monies would be a fund to
compensate victims of consumer fraud, grants to non-profit
organizations fighting fraud, and support for state programs to
educate the public about consumer fraud.
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Funds from the sale of
gift cards should be segregated and held in trust accounts so as to be
automatically honored in the event of the cards issuer’s bankruptcy.
Recent retailer bankruptcies have
resulted in consumers being unable to use their gift cards or only
being able to redeem t heir cards for pennies on the dollar.
Consumers who purchase gift cards have, in effect, prepaid for goods
and services and their purchases should be honored, regardless of
the bankruptcy status of the card issuer.
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These rights should
cover any electronic gift card with a banked dollar value.
Consumers generally do not
differentiate between gifts cards usable at a single retailer or
multiple retailers. The rights afforded them should be consistent
regardless of the issuer of the card.
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