PaymentsJournal
No Result
View All Result
SIGN UP
  • Commercial
  • Credit
  • Debit
  • Digital Assets & Crypto
  • Digital Banking
  • Emerging Payments
  • Fraud & Security
  • Merchant
  • Prepaid
PaymentsJournal
  • Commercial
  • Credit
  • Debit
  • Digital Assets & Crypto
  • Digital Banking
  • Emerging Payments
  • Fraud & Security
  • Merchant
  • Prepaid
No Result
View All Result
PaymentsJournal
No Result
View All Result

Is it Time to Decline Fallback?

By Sarah Grotta
August 14, 2017
in Analysts Coverage
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
American Express Introduces Enhanced Business Travel Account to Help Companies Manage the Reality of Business Travel - PaymentsJournal

Background from bank plastic cards. Figures on the card. Small depth of sharpness. Indoors. Horizontal format. Gray, green, yellow. Color. Photo.

 An article in The Payments Review regarding fallback transactions suggest issuers need to rethink their authorization strategy for fallback transactions. Fallback transactions and how to assess their legitimacy were a hot topic when the EMV migration kicked off. A refresher on what a fallback transaction is:


Fallback occurs when a credit or debit EMV chip card cannot be read at a chip terminal when inserted and is processed by swiping the mag stripe. Fallback is typically seen in a market where EMV is first being introduced. An incorrectly configured terminal, terminals that are not set up to process “chip and PIN”, terminals that have not been programmed to route transactions over some networks, and in rare cases, defective chips within the card, are all potential or legitimate reasons for a chip card to not be capable of being read properly at the terminal. In these cases permitting the cardholder to complete the transaction by swiping the mag stripe card at the terminal seems like the proper way to minimize customer inconvenience.

In the early days of the EMV migration, issuers were likely to approve a fallback transaction even though they would bear the liability. In those days, fallbacks occurred most frequently because of unintended issues with the terminal set up. The networks and acquirers were monitoring their occurrence and working to fix issues. The majority of fallback transactions then were actually indented by the cardholder. But now, with the EMV liability shift nearly two years in the past, most of the merchant terminal issues or defective chip issues that created fallback transactions are largely in the past. Rethinking the fallback approval strategy should be considered:

Nearly all of the terminal configuration issues have been resolved, and while there are still many merchants that have not begun to convert their mag stripe terminals to chip-accepting terminals, the vendors in this space have the experience from other implementations to ensure that future conversions are less problematic. At the same time, fraudsters have developed new ways to force fallback and use magnetic stripe data obtained in the many breaches that have occurred recently. Creating real chip cards with chips devoid of any programming (not something the terminal expects), or chip cards with unreadable chips are ways to force the terminal to request the cardholder, in this case the fraudster, to continue the transaction by swiping the card.

Overview by Sarah Grotta, Director, Debit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

Read the full story here

0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Tags: EMV

    Get the Latest News and Insights Delivered Daily

    Subscribe to the PaymentsJournal Newsletter for exclusive insight and data from Javelin Strategy & Research analysts and industry professionals.

    Must Reads

    ai phishing

    The Fraud Epidemic Is Testing the Limits of Cybersecurity

    February 6, 2026
    stablecoins b2b payments

    Stablecoins and the Future of B2B Payments: Faster, Cheaper, Better

    February 5, 2026
    Payment Facilitator

    The Payment Facilitator Model as a Growth Strategy for ISVs

    February 4, 2026
    Simplifying Payment Processing? Payment Orchestration Can Help , multi-acquiring merchants

    Multi-Acquiring Is the New Standard—Are Merchants Ready?

    February 3, 2026
    ACH Network, credit-push fraud, ACH payments growth

    What’s Driving the Rapid Growth in ACH Payments

    February 2, 2026
    chatgpt payments

    How Merchants Should Navigate the Rise of Agentic AI

    January 30, 2026
    fraud passkey

    Why the Future of Financial Fraud Prevention Is Passwordless

    January 29, 2026
    payments AI

    When Can Payments Trust AI?

    January 28, 2026

    Linkedin-in X-twitter
    • Commercial
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Digital Banking
    • Commercial
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Digital Banking
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Sign Up for Our Newsletter
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Sign Up for Our Newsletter

    ©2024 PaymentsJournal.com |  Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

    • Commercial Payments
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    No Result
    View All Result