The magnetic stripes on credit cards are absurdly insecure, and Mastercard is finally getting rid of them.

Key Takeaways

  • Magnetic stripes will be gone from Mastercard by 2033.Phone payments are safer, easier, and more private than card payments.One day, you may be able to tap your phone on an ATM to get cash.

Over the next 10 years or so, Mastercard will phase out magnetic stripes in favor of more secure chips and contactless payment methods like Apple Pay and Google Pay. This will start in Europe, which is already far ahead of the US in payment tech, and magnetic stripes will be totally erased by 2033. And a good thing too. Magnetic stripes are old technology that’s easy to exploit, whereas phone payments are way more secure, more private, and easier. 

“Unlike magnetic stripes, which merely confirm your credit card’s number and expiration date, EMV chips create unique, encrypted codes whenever you use your card. While this doesn’t completely eliminate the risk of using credit cards, it does reduce it,” Sara Rathner, credit card expert at NerdWallet told Lifewire via email. 

Security LOL

The magnetic stripe on the back of your credit card “is the exact same thing that cassette and 8-track tapes work on.” Ruston Miles, founder and advisor of Bluefin, told Lifewire via email. “Fraudsters buy card numbers obtained from the many card breaches on the dark web and print them onto magnetic stripe cards using inexpensive cards and printing machines they buy on eBay.”

Cloning a card is as simple as copying a cassette tape, yet it is still the standard in the US. But in Europe, cards are rarely swiped through a reader. Credit card terminals almost all have contactless readers, where you just wave a card or a phone over the machine. Failing that, you insert the card, and it reads the chip. 

…as we’ve seen with other forms of mobile payments and digital wallets, just because it’s available doesn’t necessarily mean a lot of people are doing it.

Paying with something like Apple Pay is even better, and even if somebody steals your phone, they still can’t use it to pay.

“With digital wallets, even the merchant can’t see your financial information. As you pay, a unique 16-digit code is applied instead of one unchanging credit card number. You also have to authenticate the purchase with a PIN or biometric information like your fingerprint or face,” says NerdWallet’s Rathner. 

It gets better.

“If your phone is lost or stolen, companies like Apple, Google, and Samsung all allow you to remotely wipe your data,” Nathan Grant, senior credit industry analyst at Credit Card Insider, told Lifewire via email. 

Barriers?

In Europe, the Apple Pay uptake was fast because most card-readers were already contactless, so iPhone payments just worked, even in countries where Apple Pay hadn’t yet been officially rolled out. In the US, the infrastructure update has been slow. 

“Change has to happen with merchants, too. You can’t use a new payment method if a store hasn’t updated their technology at the register,” says Rathner. 

When people get a taste of Apple Pay, they want to use it everywhere. And the pandemic has only sped things up. 

“A lot of Americans may have started using mobile payments for hygienic reasons (because they were afraid to touch potentially germy payment terminals), and they’ll stick with them because they’re quick, convenient, and secure,” Ted Rossman, an analyst at CreditCards.com, told Lifewire via email

“US gas stations have just recently begun accepting mobile payments at scale. They lag about five years behind most American retailers thanks to an extension they negotiated with financial institutions.”

And then there’s the biggest incentive of all—money.

“Visa will be encouraging merchants to adopt NFC contactless payments by offering lower interchange rates (that is, the mandatory credit card fees) for tokenized transactions,” Melissa Johnson, payments analyst at MerchantMaverick, told Lifewire via email. 

The Future of Electronic Payments

So far, we’ve seen how mobile payments make regular credit card payments safer, easier, and more private. But what about the future? What new features could phone payments bring?

One is that you can easily send money back and forth between friends using Apple Pay Cash. Another may be ATM withdrawals using a phone instead of a card and a number. 

…EMV chips create unique, encrypted codes whenever you use your card. While this doesn’t completely eliminate the risk of using credit cards, it does reduce it.

“Many banks already offer this capability (e.g., Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo),” says Rossman. “But as we’ve seen with other forms of mobile payments and digital wallets, just because it’s available doesn’t necessarily mean a lot of people are doing it.”

When people get used to using their phone for every payment, using a card just to withdraw cash will seem archaic. Phones really do seem to be the future of credit card payments.

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