Campus ID News
Card, mobile credential, payment and security
FEATURED
PARTNERS
cashless vend 1

Study finds cashless vending machines outperform cash-only counterparts

Andrew Hudson   ||   Apr 26, 2019  ||   , ,

A study conducted by researchers at Michigan State University, along with vending and payment solutions provider USA Technologies, has found significant performance boosts could be gained from cashless-enabled vending machines as compared to units only accepting cash and coin.

The report highlights the common practice of outfitting only high-volume machines with cashless technology, but the study's findings suggest that low-performing vending machines can provide significant revenue growth once equipped with cashless hardware.

The MSU study found that vending operators who added cashless technology to machines recording less than $2,000 per year in sales -- the "low-performers" -- experienced top-line sales growth of 110% on average over the first 18 months following deployment. This compares to the average 35% increase on the total population of machines studied.

The study also found that following deployment of cashless technology, machines recorded an increase in cash sales as well. Cashless sales increased by 131% on low-performing machines after 18 months, compared to 78% on the total population of machines studied. But cash sales at low-performing machines also increased by an average of 97% during the same period, compared to 17% on the total population of machines.

“We believe that the results of this study underscore the real financial and operational value of adding cashless technology to every machine,” says Jim Turner, senior data analyst at USA Technologies. “But it could significantly increase cash sales as well, which is partially driven by the ability to offer premium products and an increased awareness of machine performance due to online management tools. We believe that having the data to make better decisions, even on a low-performing machine, could result in significant additional revenue for operators.”

Other study findings on average over the first 18 months following cashless technology deployment include:

  • There was a 26% growth in total transactions
  • There was a 74% increase in credit card transactions and 13% increase in cash transactions
  • 70% of all growth was accounted for by increased transactions
  • Spend per transaction rose by 7% overall.

The study, conducted by Michigan State University’s Broad College of Business - MS Business Analytics (MBSA) program, provided an educational experience that combined a number of university resources in addressing the study, research, and application of data analytics. As part of the program, USA Technologies provided MSU with access to its “Knowledge Base” database, which captures sales and transaction data on all vending machines connected to the company's cashless payments platform.

MSU researchers then analyzed the data on select machines to evaluate sales activity up to 18 months following the addition of cashless technology. Results were based on sales activity of 250,000 vending machines connected to USA Technology's cashless payments platform nationwide, including 95,000 "low-performing" machines.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

RECENT ARTICLES

sia corporate credential design guide cover art

Security Industry Association releases comprehensive guide to secure credential issuance

The Security Industry Association (SIA) released its Corporate Credential Design Guide, a new resource produced by their Credential Design Working Group. It specifies recommended practices for the design and implementation of credentials and badges by card issuers and security teams. Though the document is geared toward corporate issuers, it is also highly relevant and beneficial […]
Senator Roem supporting Virginia hunger free campus meal swipe bill
Mar 26, 26 /

Virginia lawmakers table statewide campus meal swipe donation mandate for now

The bill that would enable students at virtually all Virginia universities to donate their unused meal plan credits fell just short of passing this year. State lawmakers voted to continue debating the proposal – supported by the nonprofit Swipe Out Hunger organization – in the 2027 session. The bill was introduced by Senate Democrat Danica Roem […]
UT Austin Mobile ID
Mar 26, 26 / ,

Student-driven mobile ID initiative at UT Austin gets go-ahead

The University of Texas at Austin is preparing to launch mobile student IDs beginning in the 2027–28 academic year. The initiative, driven by strong student demand and backed by university leadership, will allow students, faculty, and staff to access campus services using credentials stored in their mobile wallets. Spearheaded by Student Government leadership, the effort […]
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.