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Interchange Fees in India: How They Shape Your Credit Card Rewards

Interchange Fees in India: How They Shape Your Credit Card Rewards

Every swipe generates 1.5% in interchange. Here's how the bank splits that between profit and rewards.

Arjun Banerjee

Banking analyst turned writer. Tracks RBI rate moves and how they reach your monthly statement.

3 June 2026
4 min read

What interchange is

When you swipe a credit card at a merchant, three transactions happen in parallel:

  1. The merchant's acquiring bank charges the merchant a Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) of 1.5%–2.5%.
  2. The acquiring bank shares a portion of that MDR with your card-issuing bank as interchange. For Visa/Mastercard credit, that's typically 1.1%–1.5%.
  3. The card network (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, RuPay) takes its own small cut.

For a ₹1,000 transaction at a clothing merchant, the merchant pays ~₹18 in MDR, of which ~₹14 goes to the issuing bank as interchange. The remaining ₹4 is split between the acquirer and the network.

The interchange pool

Across India's 100+ million active credit cards, the annual interchange pool exceeds ₹50,000 crore. This is the revenue that funds:

  • Reward points (0.5%–1.5% of spend).
  • Welcome bonuses (₹5,000–₹50,000 per card).
  • Lounge access (₹1,500–₹4,000 per visit).
  • Concierge, golf, milestone vouchers.
  • Customer acquisition (₹500–₹2,000 per issued card).
  • Operations (statements, customer service, fraud losses).

A bank needs interchange to exceed the sum of these costs to make money on a card. Premium cards (HDFC Infinia, Axis Atlas) typically do; lifetime-free cards (Amazon Pay ICICI, Flipkart Axis) typically don't — they break even on interchange and earn margin on cross-sell.

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The category variations

Interchange varies by merchant category:

  • Dining (MCC 5812): 1.5%–2.0%. Highest interchange in retail.
  • Travel (MCC 3000–4999): 1.3%–1.8%.
  • Supermarkets (MCC 5411): 1.0%–1.5%.
  • Department stores (MCC 5311): 1.0%–1.5%.
  • Fuel (MCC 5541): 0.5%–1.0%. Lowest interchange.
  • Utilities (MCC 4900): 0.4%–0.9%. Capped after BBPS rollout.

This is why dining-focused cards earn more rewards on dining — the interchange is higher. And why fuel cards earn less — the interchange is lower.

The rewards-to-interchange ratio

A typical premium card's rewards-to-interchange ratio:

  • HDFC Diners Club Black: 3.33% rewards / 1.5% interchange = 222%. The bank subsidises rewards from other revenue.
  • HDFC Regalia: 2.67% / 1.5% = 178%. The bank breaks even or slightly subsidises.
  • Amazon Pay ICICI: 5% on Amazon / 1.5% Amazon interchange = 333%. The bank subsidises heavily to win market share.
  • HDFC MoneyBack: 1.33% / 1.5% = 89%. The bank earns a small margin.

Cards where rewards exceed interchange are subsidy cards. The bank earns back the subsidy through:

  • Annual fees (the primary revenue for premium cards).
  • Cross-sell: personal loans, mortgages, demat accounts.
  • Balance sheet usage: your unpaid balance earns the bank 8%–12% per annum.
  • Interchange on other categories: high-reward categories are subsidized by low-reward categories.

The welcome bonus economics

A welcome bonus of 10,000 MR points (Amex Platinum Travel) is worth ₹15,000–₹20,000 in airline value. The bank funds this from:

  • Interchange on the welcome-bonus spend: ₹1,00,000 × 1.5% = ₹1,500. The bank earns only ₹1,500 in interchange.
  • Lifetime value of the customer: the bank expects 5–10 years of card use. ₹1,500/year × 7 years = ₹10,500.
  • Cross-sell opportunity: the bank expects the cardholder to take a personal loan, mortgage, or demat account.

The ₹15,000 welcome bonus is funded by future revenue, not by the welcome-bonus spend itself.

The cashback card economics

Cashback cards (Amazon Pay ICICI, Flipkart Axis) are different from rewards cards:

  • Earn rate: 5% on the namesake merchant (Amazon, Flipkart).
  • Interchange: 1.5%–2.0% on the namesake merchant.
  • Effective subsidy: 3%–3.5% of spend.

The bank subsidises 3% on Amazon spend. Why? Because the bank's strategy is to acquire the customer for cross-sell. Once the customer has a relationship with the bank, the bank sells them personal loans (11%–24% per annum), mortgages (8%–12%), and demat accounts. The customer becomes profitable in 12–18 months.

The premium card economics

Premium cards (HDFC Infinia, Diners Club Black) have different economics:

  • Annual fee: ₹10,000–₹12,500.
  • Rewards: 3.33% baseline + transfer partners + 10X on SmartBuy.
  • Interchange: 1.1%–1.5% (Visa/Diners).
  • Net revenue per card per year: fee + interchange − rewards = ₹10,000 + ₹7,500 − ₹15,000 = ₹2,500 profit per card per year.

Premium cards are profitable from year 1 if the customer uses them actively. The fee covers the rewards; the interchange adds margin.

The lifetime-free card economics

Lifetime-free cards (Amazon Pay ICICI, SBI Cashback) have inverted economics:

  • Annual fee: ₹0.
  • Rewards: 1%–5% depending on category.
  • Interchange: 1.1%–2.0% depending on category.
  • Net revenue per card per year: 0 + interchange − rewards = -₹3,000 to ₹5,000 loss per card per year (for the bank).

The bank subsidises lifetime-free cards to acquire customers. The customer's lifetime value (via cross-sell) is the bank's revenue.

The implications for cardholders

Understanding interchange helps you understand which cards are designed for you:

  • Premium cards (HDFC Infinia, DCB, Atlas): high rewards + fee. The bank wants high-spenders.
  • Cashback cards (Amazon Pay ICICI, Flipkart Axis): high cashback + no fee. The bank wants customers for cross-sell.
  • Entry-level cards (HDFC MoneyBack, SBI SimplyCLICK): low rewards + low fee. The bank wants broad relationships.
  • Co-brand cards (Tata Neu HDFC, SBI IRCTC): medium rewards + co-marketing benefits. The bank wants specific customer segments.

The card's economics drive the bank's marketing. Pick the card whose economics align with your spending — and the bank will pay you back.

The bottom line

Interchange is the engine that funds credit-card rewards. The 1.1%–1.5% interchange on Visa/Mastercard credit generates the ₹50,000 crore pool that funds rewards, lounge access, welcome bonuses, and concierge services. Premium cards break even; lifetime-free cards are subsidised. As a cardholder, understanding interchange helps you understand which cards are designed for you and why some cards have higher rewards than others. The math rarely lies.

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