iPhone Tap to Pay is now more widely available
Apple has expanded the reach of Tap to Pay on iPhone today, with five new countries added across Europe where this feature now works. In case you're confused, Tap to Pay is the feature that lets businesses use an iPhone as a contactless terminal to accept card payments. The customer can simply tap their contactless card, iPhone, Apple Watch, Android device, or Wear OS watch near the merchant's iPhone to complete the transaction using NFC on the merchant's iPhone.
Tap to Pay is supported on all iPhones starting with the iPhone XS. Transactions using Tap to Pay are processed using the Secure Element inside the device's A series Apple chip, so they are private.
The new countries where this is now available are Austria, Czechia, Ireland, Romania, and Sweden. Payment partners for this service include Adyen, Revolut, SumUp, and Viva. Here's Apple's full statement on the rollout:
Starting today, Adyen, SumUp, and Viva.com are the first payment platforms to offer Tap to Pay on iPhone across all five countries. Stripe is available in Austria, Czech Republic, Ireland, and Sweden; Global Payments with Erste Bank is available in Austria, Czech Republic, and Romania; Nexi is available in Austria and Sweden; Revolut is available in Austria and Ireland; myPOS and PAYONE are available in Austria; Square is available in Ireland; and Zettle by PayPal is available in Sweden. hobex in Austria, BOI Payment Acceptance\Global Payments in Ireland, and Surfboard Payments in Sweden will enable Tap to Pay on iPhone for their customers in the coming weeks. Tap to Pay on iPhone works with contactless credit and debit cards from leading payment networks, including American Express, Discover, Mastercard, and Visa.
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Reader comments
- Sugu
- 31 Oct 2024
- vGN
When's it coming to India? Been waiting for years now
- Anonymous
- 29 Oct 2024
- AVw
Wierd, a friend of mine works for a bank (the netherlands, europe) and the only one paying transaction cost for apple pay or google pay (samsung pay is not supported here) is the bank itself, they provide it as a service for the customer because the ...
- Anonymous
- 29 Oct 2024
- JH2
A mobile terminal. Perfect for illegal business. Why the hell would someone use their phone to accept payments?