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DCUC warns Illinois interchange law threatens payment system stability, applauds OCC response

WASHINGTON, DC (May 29, 2026) |

The Defense Credit Union Council (DCUC) has written to the Office of  the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) regarding its interim final rule and interim final order  concerning the Illinois Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA), expressing strong support for the  OCC’s conclusion that federal law preempts the Illinois statute as applied to institutions  supervised by the OCC.  

DCUC further supports the OCC’s companion clarification affirming that national banks may  charge and receive non-interest compensation, including interchange fees from payment-card  activity, even as such fees are set by or in consultation with third parties. 

“DCUC applauds the OCC for taking timely and decisive action to preserve the integrity,  consistency, and security of the nation’s payments system,” says Anthony Hernandez, DCUC  President/CEO, Ret. U.S. Air Force Colonel. “For credit unions and the communities they serve,  maintaining a reliable national payments framework is essential to ensuring uninterrupted  financial access, operational certainty, and continued investment in fraud prevention and  payments innovation.” 

"A national payments system cannot function efficiently if banks, credit unions, merchants,  processors, and payment networks are forced to operate under fragmented state-by-state  transaction-processing mandates," wrote Jason Stverak, DCUC Chief Advocacy Officer on  

behalf of DCUC. "The OCC correctly recognized that uniformity is essential to the functioning of  modern payment-card systems and that a fractured patchwork of state laws would undermine  that uniformity and materially disrupt interstate commerce. That conclusion is especially  important for institutions that serve members and customers across state lines and rely on  nationally integrated payment networks every day. The Illinois statute itself illustrates the  problem..."

DCUC noted that Article 150 of 815 ILCS 151 prohibits interchange fees on the tax amount or  gratuity of an electronic payment transaction, establishes a manual documentation-and-refund  process, imposes civil penalties for violations, and restricts the use of electronic payment  transaction data except for transaction processing or as otherwise required by law. 

"They reach directly into how payment-card networks price transactions, how banks and related  entities process those transactions, and how transaction data may be used for operational and  risk-management purposes." 

DCUC pointed to the OCC’s findings that current payment-card infrastructure does not support  the Illinois statute’s automatic processing requirements and that implementation would require  substantial technological and operational changes across payment-card networks, financial  institutions, and merchants: 

"The costs and risks associated with those mandates would be substantial. The OCC estimated  that, absent preemption, OCC-supervised banks would face more than $232 million in initial  system-upgrade costs, approximately $145 million per year in manual documentation processing costs for the first several years, and approximately $200 million in lost issuer  revenue. The agency also recognized that institutions might have to notify customers and  merchants about possible changes to payment-card terms, new software or hardware  requirements, and the possibility that some transactions could be declined, creating significant  confusion and uncertainty about whether payment cards would continue to work as consumers  expect. Those are exactly the kinds of burdens that would ultimately be borne by consumers  through reduced services, higher costs, and less reliable payment access." 

DCUC expressed support for the OCC’s conclusion that the Illinois law’s data-use restrictions  interfere with federally authorized banking powers and that transaction data is essential for fraud  prevention, cybersecurity, risk management, operational efficiency, and consumer services. 

"Service members, veterans, and their families depend on a reliable national payments  infrastructure, not one that changes from state to state based on conflicting transaction processing mandates. For that reason, DCUC supports corresponding action by the National  Credit Union Administration to protect federal credit union powers and preserve a uniform  national payments framework for credit unions as well. Public reporting on the OCC action also  reflected the credit-union industry’s concern that laws like the Illinois statute could jeopardize  funding for fraud prevention services, rewards programs, and new payments technology." 

DCUC thanked the OCC for acting promptly to provide clarity before the Illinois law’s July 1,  2026, effective date. 

"The OCC’s interim final order and companion interim final rule are necessary, well-reasoned,  and vital to preserving the integrity of the national banking system and the broader payments  ecosystem on which consumers, businesses, and military communities rely every day," said  Stverak.

View DCUC’s official letter here

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