Campus ID News
Card, mobile credential, payment and security
FEATURED
PARTNERS

Higher One cuts a deal, drops fees

CampusIDNews Staff   ||   Sep 13, 2010  ||   ,

Higher One, provider of financial solutions to education institutions, has made a deal with Portland State University and Southern Oregon University to do away with some of its fees, according to a columnist at The Oregonian.

When the universities’ Higher One contracts came up for renewal, administrators negotiated that the 50-cent swipe fee be dropped from the card. The PSU One Card, Portland State’s official student ID, is branded with a MasterCard logo, which means students can tap funds at an ATM or wherever MasterCard is accepted.

However, students complain about the unusual fees that come as a result of doing so.

Higher One and the universities have started a campaign to encourage students to use the credit function of the card instead of the debit function, according to the columnist. Students who swipe the card as a “debit” and enter their personal identification number would get charged a 50-cent fee each time.

By choosing credit Higher One receives a higher interchange fee from the merchant even though they will be losing out on the 50-cent fee from students. The 50-cent swipe fee could be reinstated if the universities campaign to get students to use the credit functionality isn’t successful.

Higher One has been criticized in the past because of its fees. The company charges an abandoned account fee of up to $19 a month, if a student doesn’t use an account after nine months. They also pay $2.50 when they don’t use a Higher One ATM, which are located only on college campuses.

Update: Following the original posting of this piece, CR80News spoke with Scott Gallagher, director of communications for Portland State University.

He said that the fee drawing the most student attention is the 50-cent charge for PIN-debit transactions. This was a topic when Higher One renegotiated its contracts with Portland State and Southern Oregon universities, he adds, stressing that student input was a key driver to get Higher One to drop the fee.

In exchange for dropping the PIN-based debit fee, Gallagher says the universities agreed to encourage students to choose signature-based transactions when using the Higher One card. The schools have put information on their Web site encouraging students to “swipe and sign” instead of entering the PIN. Higher One receives a higher interchange fee from merchants when signature-based transactions are conducted. This, it appears, is intended help to offset the foregone revenues from the 50-cent fees.

Portland State encourages students to use the Higher One-provided service to transfer financial aid funds to their own bank account, Gallagher says. Materials passed out during financial aid seminars detail the different options students have and depositing aid into the actual Higher One account is just one. At PSU roughly a third of the student population direct their funds to the Higher One account, he says.

To read the full column click here.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

RECENT ARTICLES

Grubhub drones for campus delivery?
Apr 22, 26 / ,

Is campus delivery via Grubhub drones on the horizon?

Customers ordering from a multi-concept dining location in Green Brook, NJ are having their food delivered through the skies. It’s a pilot project between food delivery company Grubhub, its parent company Wonder, and drone developer Dexa. This spring, customers within a 2.5-mile delivery radius of the Wonder location began opting for drone delivery in the […]
FutureState logo with mobile credentials

New company FutureState born from UArizona’s vendor-agnostic identity and credentialing platform

The University of Arizona (UA) pioneered a different approach to managing credentials as well as the integrations with downstream services such as access, housing, dining, events, and parking. Instead of relying on systems primarily controlled by a single vendor, they sought a more agnostic approach that put the university at the center. The success of […]
pickleball party invite
Apr 16, 26 /

Join the CampusIDNews at Pickleball Lodge, Tuesday evening at NACCU

CampusIDNews is celebrating its 25th year supporting the campus ID and auxiliary service industry. It would not be possible without all the campus and vendor friends we've come to know over the years, so come out and join us for an evening of fun and camaraderie.  The venue is an indoor pickleball facility with great […]
CIDN logo reversed
The only publication dedicated to the use of campus cards, mobile credentials, identity and security technology in the education market. CampusIDNews – formerly CR80News – has served more than 6,500 subscribers for more than two decades.
Twitter

Great inverview on the Public Key Open Credential (PKOC) standard with ELATEC's Jason Ouellette, Chairman of the Board for the @PSIAlliance.

Attn: friends in the biometrics space. Nominations close Friday for the annual Women in Biometrics Awards. Take five minutes to recognize a colleague or even yourself. http://WomenInBiometrics.com

Load More...
Contact
CampusIDNews is published by AVISIAN Publishing
315 E. Georgia St.
Tallahassee, FL 32301
www.AVISIAN.com[email protected]
Use our contact form to submit tips, corrections, or questions to our team.
©2026 CampusIDNews. All rights reserved.