Cobargo Hotel owner David Allen
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A regional pub owner has warned the RBA’s proposed card surcharge ban could drive up the price of a beer as publicans are forced to pass the fee back onto customers.

The Reserve Bank wants to end debit and credit card surcharges for Eftpos, Mastercard, and Visa in Australia, a ban which it claims would save customers a combined $1.2 billion per year.

Pub, cafe, restaurant and other hospitality owners are now worried they will foot the bill and will need to hike up prices to ease this fresh wave of financial strain if the ban goes through.

Cobargo Hotel owner David Allen
Cobargo Hotel and Motel owner David Allen. (Supplied)

Pub owner David Allen, who owns Cobargo Hotel and Motel in regional south-east NSW, told 9news.com.au it could cost him up to $1500 more per month per terminal if the surcharge ban is implemented next year.

“We’re on a very good rate and there are some businesses that aren’t on those good rates, but it’s still costing us about $1500 a month in surcharges and a fee each month to hire the terminal,” Allen said.

“We’ve got five terminals here. So, it’s about $20,000 a year.”

Allen said many hospitality venues are already feeling a huge strain after the rate decision last week and an ever-persisting cost-of-living crisis.

He predicts the proposal could lift the price of things like coffee, a parmigiana and even beer.

The pub owner doesn’t want his regional customers to fork out more for a simple pleasure, but it could be reality by next year.

“We’re around that $9-$9.50 mark for beer and that’s a psychological barrier already,” he said.

“We just wouldn’t be able to afford to cop that whole $20,000.

“If we couldn’t pass it on to the customer, we’d have to put prices up.

“There’s just no fat left on the animal.”

Cobargo Hotel in NSW
Allen predicts the proposal could lift the price of things like coffee, a pub meal and even beer. (Supplied)

Allen said the surcharge ban, combined with higher wages and superannuation changes, are stretching businesses to breaking point.

“We’re just getting squeezed at both ends, that’s the reason why there’s so many hospitality businesses that keep going under,” he added.

“It’s not rocket science, you just can’t keep doing it.”

Around 90 per cent of Australian businesses are estimated to be better off under the proposed policies, the RBA said yesterday.

However, Australian Hotels Association CEO Stephen Ferguson said the proposed ban doesn’t make much sense if the guise of saving customers money in surcharges results in higher prices.

He said the bigger vendors may be able to wear the cost, but smaller businesses like the pub in Cobargo are going to “really hurt”.

“In the hospitality sector, the really small guys, coffee vendors and small cafes operate on a margin of 3 to 5 per cent,” he told 9news.com.au.

“The bigger scale hotels will operate maybe up to 10 per cent, but [the smaller ones] can’t afford that one per cent coming out of their profit, and they’ll just pass that cost on.”

LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 26: A member of the bar staff pours a pint of beer at the Westminster Arms pub on September 26, 2024 in London, England. Researchers from the University of Cambridge say that if licensed premises across the UK reduced the standard serving of beer from a pint to two-thirds of a pint, it could reduce alcohol consumption overall and improve public health. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images)
The price of beer is already edging towards $10 in the regional pub. (Getty)

The RBA has also proposed more transparency around fees by requiring providers to display their wholesale charges clearly.

Ferguson said this isn’t enough to ensure business owners get the best deal.

“It’s just more convenient to stick with what you know and deal with one bank instead of dealing with multiple,” he said.

“It’s a big leap of faith to say everyone’s going to have this magic epiphany and everyone’s going to start finding the lowest cost.”

A feedback window on the proposals is open until August 26 this year, before the reforms are finalised.

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