First, credit card truncation means that electronically printed credit card receipts will print only part of the card number, usually the last four numbers. This is to prevent lost receipts from being used for fraudulent transactions.
There is no Michigan law requiring credit card truncation. However, Visa has new requirements regarding credit card truncation that retailers need to understand.
Effective July 1, 2003, Visa requires that all new equipment for producing electronically printed credit card receipts must provide customers with receipts with truncated numbers and no expiration date.
The deadline for existing machines—the date by which Visa requires all machines, new or old, to support truncation—is July 1, 2006. The extra three years gives retailers with older equipment time to make the necessary changes.
Truncation basics:
For most retailers who do not yet offer truncated receipts, the change to truncation will mean reprogramming the software. MRA customers who use our bankcard services are not charged for reprogramming.
For some retailers, it’s simply a matter of turning on the truncation option. A few retailers will need to replace old machines that cannot support truncation.
Although the deadline for all machines to support truncation is still three years away, retailers would be wise to understand the issue and include truncation support in any business plans.