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Debit card retail spending outstrips cash spending for first time

Date: 20 April 2006
Today APACS have released figures that show UK residents are now using their debit cards to pay for goods more often than paying with cash. Debit cards were first introduced nearly 20 years ago as an alternative way of paying for goods using the money in your bank account rather than using a cheque with a guarantee card. A debit card takes money directly from your bank account and is more convenient than carrying a cheque book with a guarantee card and is also much safer than carrying large sums of cash. The majority of shops now take debit and credit cards (some may ask you to spend a minimum amount, usually around £5, or charge you to use your card if you spend less than this) so there seems little reason to carry cash around unless you are only going to spend a few pence!

Official report below:

Debit card retail spending outstrips cash spending for first time

  • Debit cards accounted for 37% of all retail spend in 2005, ahead of cash at 34%
  • Plastic cards used for 63% of all UK retail spending last year
Figures released today (18 April 2006) by APACS, the UK payments association, show debit card spending in retail outlets exceeded cash spending for the first time ever last year.

The figures, which cover all retail transactions in 2005 (both online and offline) show debit card spending at 37 per cent (£89bn) of the total £240bn spent, against cash at 34 per cent (£81bn). This shows retail debit card use up nine per cent on 2004 figures of £82bn of retail spending, against cash retail spending down four per cent from £84bn.

UK retail spending* Total UK spending**
20052004% Change20052004% Change
Debit cards £89bn£82bn+9%£171bn£150bn+14%
Credit cards £61bn£61bn -£124bn£123bn+1%
Plastic card total£150bn£143bn+5%£295bn£273bn+8%
Cash spending£81bn£84bn-4%£273bn£272bn+.5%
Cheques£9bn£11bn-14%£186bn£209bn-12%
Automated (direct debits, phone, online, standing order payments)---£251bn£239bn+5%

Today APACS also released total personal spending on all types of payments in 2005; this also showed cards increasingly being used instead of cash and follows the trend reported by APACS in December 2004 when total personal spending on debit and credit cards overtook cash for the first time.

Sandra Quinn, director of communications at APACS says:

“At the end of 2004, we saw total UK spending on plastic overtake cash for the first time, signalling a real sea change in our payment habits. This change was mainly driven by debit card use. The 2005 figures show that this trend is continuing with debit card spending in retail outlets crashing through the cash barrier for the first time ever.

“There are many reasons behind this continuing trend to pay by debit card, and one of the reasons is that more businesses are accepting cards. However it is also being led by us as customers - debit cards have been around in the UK for almost 20 years so we now have an entire generation of shoppers who readily delve for their debit card instead of cash.”

“It is clear that there are certain situations when we tend to use a credit card rather than a debit card – for bigger items and when buying online or overseas. Consumers welcome the convenience and security credit cards bring.”

The combined retail figures of spending on credit and debit cards show a continued increase in plastic card use – accounting for 63 per cent of all retail spending in 2005, up from 60 per cent in 2004.

 





 
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