Potentially Harmful Practices in Business Credit Card Products
Business credit cards include those labeled for “corporate,” “small business” or “professional” use. They function in most respects like consumer cards, but with key legal differences. Account agreements typically include language requiring cardholders to use the cards for “business” or “commercial” purposes only, though these terms are rarely defined and difficult to enforce.2 Business cards also require applicants to be personally liable for all expenses on any card linked to the business account, yet consumer protection laws, including the Truth in Lending Act, generally do not apply to these products.3 Nor does the Credit CARD Act, a 2009 law targeting practices that federal regulators deemed “harmful” and “unfair or deceptive” for consumers.4 Consequently, individual business card applicants can face hundreds or thousands of dollars in unexpected charges if issuers raise rates on existing balances or impose hair-trigger penalties and other costs of the sort that are not permissible on consumer credit cards.5
Pew researchers found that the same potentially harmful practices previously applied to consumer credit cards remain widespread among business cards (see Table 1). This conclusion is based on an analysis of the 12 largest credit card issuers, which control an estimated 85 percent of the small business credit card market.6
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