How do natives say how they would like to pay?










7















How do natives answer the question "How would you like to pay?" When I want to pay with my bank card, sometimes they ask credit or debit? Sometimes they ask Visa or Mastercard? So I now usually say "credit", or "Visa". Does that sound natural? Besides to what you think it's natural to say, what do you think about the following options?



  1. Card?

  2. Bank card?

  3. By card?

  4. With card?

  5. On my/the card?

  6. Credit/Debit (card)

  7. Visa/Mastercard

Additionally, what if you want to pay with cash?



  1. Cash?

  2. By cash?









share|improve this question

















  • 7





    Natives where? English can be quite different across the globe.

    – J...
    Aug 26 '18 at 13:35











  • Define "bank card". As far as I know, that either refers to a debit card or a credit card, so it doesn't strike me as an offputting question. But then, I am a US native.

    – Sinjai
    Aug 26 '18 at 19:54











  • @Strawberry: Answer in answers, not in comments. Comments don't have the quality assurance mechanisms that answers do.

    – V2Blast
    Aug 26 '18 at 22:39











  • @J... Natives anywhere. I just want to know the right way to say it, as long as it's right somewhere.

    – TheoYou
    Aug 27 '18 at 12:52















7















How do natives answer the question "How would you like to pay?" When I want to pay with my bank card, sometimes they ask credit or debit? Sometimes they ask Visa or Mastercard? So I now usually say "credit", or "Visa". Does that sound natural? Besides to what you think it's natural to say, what do you think about the following options?



  1. Card?

  2. Bank card?

  3. By card?

  4. With card?

  5. On my/the card?

  6. Credit/Debit (card)

  7. Visa/Mastercard

Additionally, what if you want to pay with cash?



  1. Cash?

  2. By cash?









share|improve this question

















  • 7





    Natives where? English can be quite different across the globe.

    – J...
    Aug 26 '18 at 13:35











  • Define "bank card". As far as I know, that either refers to a debit card or a credit card, so it doesn't strike me as an offputting question. But then, I am a US native.

    – Sinjai
    Aug 26 '18 at 19:54











  • @Strawberry: Answer in answers, not in comments. Comments don't have the quality assurance mechanisms that answers do.

    – V2Blast
    Aug 26 '18 at 22:39











  • @J... Natives anywhere. I just want to know the right way to say it, as long as it's right somewhere.

    – TheoYou
    Aug 27 '18 at 12:52













7












7








7


1






How do natives answer the question "How would you like to pay?" When I want to pay with my bank card, sometimes they ask credit or debit? Sometimes they ask Visa or Mastercard? So I now usually say "credit", or "Visa". Does that sound natural? Besides to what you think it's natural to say, what do you think about the following options?



  1. Card?

  2. Bank card?

  3. By card?

  4. With card?

  5. On my/the card?

  6. Credit/Debit (card)

  7. Visa/Mastercard

Additionally, what if you want to pay with cash?



  1. Cash?

  2. By cash?









share|improve this question














How do natives answer the question "How would you like to pay?" When I want to pay with my bank card, sometimes they ask credit or debit? Sometimes they ask Visa or Mastercard? So I now usually say "credit", or "Visa". Does that sound natural? Besides to what you think it's natural to say, what do you think about the following options?



  1. Card?

  2. Bank card?

  3. By card?

  4. With card?

  5. On my/the card?

  6. Credit/Debit (card)

  7. Visa/Mastercard

Additionally, what if you want to pay with cash?



  1. Cash?

  2. By cash?






spoken-english phrase-choice






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Aug 26 '18 at 9:32









TheoYouTheoYou

33236




33236







  • 7





    Natives where? English can be quite different across the globe.

    – J...
    Aug 26 '18 at 13:35











  • Define "bank card". As far as I know, that either refers to a debit card or a credit card, so it doesn't strike me as an offputting question. But then, I am a US native.

    – Sinjai
    Aug 26 '18 at 19:54











  • @Strawberry: Answer in answers, not in comments. Comments don't have the quality assurance mechanisms that answers do.

    – V2Blast
    Aug 26 '18 at 22:39











  • @J... Natives anywhere. I just want to know the right way to say it, as long as it's right somewhere.

    – TheoYou
    Aug 27 '18 at 12:52












  • 7





    Natives where? English can be quite different across the globe.

    – J...
    Aug 26 '18 at 13:35











  • Define "bank card". As far as I know, that either refers to a debit card or a credit card, so it doesn't strike me as an offputting question. But then, I am a US native.

    – Sinjai
    Aug 26 '18 at 19:54











  • @Strawberry: Answer in answers, not in comments. Comments don't have the quality assurance mechanisms that answers do.

    – V2Blast
    Aug 26 '18 at 22:39











  • @J... Natives anywhere. I just want to know the right way to say it, as long as it's right somewhere.

    – TheoYou
    Aug 27 '18 at 12:52







7




7





Natives where? English can be quite different across the globe.

– J...
Aug 26 '18 at 13:35





Natives where? English can be quite different across the globe.

– J...
Aug 26 '18 at 13:35













Define "bank card". As far as I know, that either refers to a debit card or a credit card, so it doesn't strike me as an offputting question. But then, I am a US native.

– Sinjai
Aug 26 '18 at 19:54





Define "bank card". As far as I know, that either refers to a debit card or a credit card, so it doesn't strike me as an offputting question. But then, I am a US native.

– Sinjai
Aug 26 '18 at 19:54













@Strawberry: Answer in answers, not in comments. Comments don't have the quality assurance mechanisms that answers do.

– V2Blast
Aug 26 '18 at 22:39





@Strawberry: Answer in answers, not in comments. Comments don't have the quality assurance mechanisms that answers do.

– V2Blast
Aug 26 '18 at 22:39













@J... Natives anywhere. I just want to know the right way to say it, as long as it's right somewhere.

– TheoYou
Aug 27 '18 at 12:52





@J... Natives anywhere. I just want to know the right way to say it, as long as it's right somewhere.

– TheoYou
Aug 27 '18 at 12:52










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















8















How would you like to pay?




In short, informal interactions, such as with a cashier, it's perfectly fine to respond with one word. Or, you don't need to use a proper sentence with a subject and a verb:




  • Cash

  • Card

  • etc.



If you need to specify, again, you can be brief:




  • Visa

  • Mastercard

  • Apple Pay

  • Debit

  • Credit

  • etc.



If you want to use a preposition, you can use with. In my AmE opinion, you cannot use *by with cash or card:




  • With cash

  • With a/my card



This is generally short for I will pay with cash/my card, or in response to "Will you pay with cash or card?"



BrE users are saying "by card" works form them:




  • By card (BrE)



It wasn't mentioned in the OP and I completely forgot, but @JeremyC points out that you can say by check/cheque:




  • By check (AmE)

  • By cheque (BrE)



I think on my card is okay in a few cases:




  • You can charge it on my card.

  • You can put it on my card.



I agree with @J.R. Charge it to my card sounds better to me.






share|improve this answer




















  • 6





    With regards to prepositions, I generally use, "Put it on my card," but, "Charge it to my card."

    – J.R.
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:12







  • 4





    In 'more than single word' interactions, I'd definitely use the phrase 'by card' [& probably more likely than the other option, 'with'], though I would never use the word 'charge'. I think they may be slight transpondian differences - though not sufficient to be worth a separate answer.

    – Tetsujin
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:52






  • 1





    As a Brit, I don't see anything wrong with "pay by card" - though "pay by cash" does sound wrong. Google "pay by card" (in quotes to get the exact phrase) gives many UK hits, including the websites of major companies like British Telecom (BT), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) etc.

    – alephzero
    Aug 26 '18 at 12:55












  • For the decreasing number of Brits who use cheques to pay, the word is definitely "by".

    – JeremyC
    Aug 26 '18 at 14:58


















3














The fewer words, the better: "Cash", "Credit", or "Debit". If they want more information, they'll ask. There was a time when they needed to know the type of card, (e.g., Visa or MasterCard), but that's rare today.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    I am British. I would invariably add 'please' to any response e.g. 'cash, please'. If I did not, I would feel I was being rude, and so might the shop worker. Usually just 'card please' will be the appropriate response. I don't know if other cultures have this 'politeness' thing as much as we do.

    – Michael Harvey
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:38











  • I also say 'thank you' after the transaction has been successfully processed. If I am feeling light-hearted, I may gaze at the card terminal in pretended anxiety and gasp "Thank God!" when the word 'Authorised' appears on the little screen. Anything to make the transaction less impersonal.

    – Michael Harvey
    Aug 26 '18 at 11:09











  • I am British too, but I would never say 'please' here. When I pay, it's me that's doing them the favour! But I do say 'thank you' after the transaction if I'm not feeling especially grumpy.

    – TonyK
    Aug 26 '18 at 21:17


















2














Honestly, I usually just hold up the card (if I’m going to use it and there’s a terminal I need to use it in), or hand them the card (if I don’t have a terminal) or the cash. No need to say anything, though as stated above, a single word of “card” or “cash” is generally sufficient, and if they need to know more (e.g. credit or debit), they’ll ask. [United States]






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  • With some outfits, such as Square, you are limited: They only take Visa and MC, but not debit, discover, Amex. As a Square using vendor, I rattle off that we take cash, email transfer, cheque, visa, mc as a preface to "how would you like to pay"

    – Sherwood Botsford
    Aug 26 '18 at 12:53


















2














Depends on the context. People usually say "By card". The merchant also usually doesn't care*, because they'll plug your card in a machine, that reads any of them.



*Sometimes merchants may be unable to support a few cards, such as AMEX. In that case it might be useful to say if yours is a Visa/Mastercard/etc.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    In Britain, where the difference between credit and debit cards is of no significance at the point of sale, people just say "Card". "Cash or card?", "Card only" are common expressions to hear or see

    – Colin Fine
    Aug 26 '18 at 9:53







  • 2





    Your answer doesn't account for the Discover card – which may be important since not all vendors accept it.

    – J.R.
    Aug 26 '18 at 9:56






  • 1





    In the US you may be asked "credit or debit" when the merchant's register or payment processor makes the distinction something that the cashier has to act on. But this isn't common anymore; most of the time the machine will (or won't) ask you this.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 26 '18 at 21:40











  • @MichaelHampton Agreed. Its rare that a merchant has to figure out which type of card you're using.

    – goelakash
    Aug 27 '18 at 4:25


















1














The correct answer depends on what question they asked, exactly.



If they ask "How would you like to pay?" you can say something like "cash", or "by credit card", or "debit card, please". Other answers talk about the exact choice of words to use here.



If they ask "Credit or debit?", then you have to use either the word "credit" or the word "debit". This will affect the way that the payment is processed, and the details are a little complicated. It's fine to say "credit" if it's a credit card and "debit" for debit cards. If you'd like more information, try doing a Google search for "Should I say credit or debit?"



Likewise, if they ask "Visa or MasterCard?" (or "What type of card is it?"), then you have to tell them who your card processor is: Visa or Mastercard (or Discover or American Express).



If you're paying by cash and they ask "credit or debit" or "Visa or MasterCard", you can say: "Oh, uh, I've got cash, is that all right?"






share|improve this answer






























    0














    Generic Answers Are Usually Better



    I will answer from my own perspective as both a consumer and a business owner in the United States. Here, the question is generally asked because the cashier needs to press the right key on a point-of-sale system to prepare the transaction for payment. The generic choices are typically:



    • cash

    • check

    • debit

    • credit

    Any of these four are acceptable answers to a generic question from cashiers. However, some point-of-sale systems differentiate between different credit card systems and networks, or have separate readers, PIN pads, or other devices depending on the payment type. If it truly matters, the cashier may ask you “Visa or MasterCard?“, or ask other clarifying questions, so that they know which keys to press on the register. They may also need to know which of their various payment peripherals to present or direct you to.



    The various examples you gave all seem like reasonable responses, but are possibly too detailed for most routine transactions. Answering a generic question with more detail is sometimes a polite way to ensure that a less widely-accepted payment method (e.g. American Express, Discover, or Google Pay) will be okay before presenting it, but this is neither required nor expected in most situations.






    share|improve this answer























    • Are cheques still common enough in the US to even be in that list any more? In the UK there hasn't been a high-street retailer that will still take cheques in at least a decade.

      – Tetsujin
      Aug 27 '18 at 8:11










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    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes








    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    8















    How would you like to pay?




    In short, informal interactions, such as with a cashier, it's perfectly fine to respond with one word. Or, you don't need to use a proper sentence with a subject and a verb:




    • Cash

    • Card

    • etc.



    If you need to specify, again, you can be brief:




    • Visa

    • Mastercard

    • Apple Pay

    • Debit

    • Credit

    • etc.



    If you want to use a preposition, you can use with. In my AmE opinion, you cannot use *by with cash or card:




    • With cash

    • With a/my card



    This is generally short for I will pay with cash/my card, or in response to "Will you pay with cash or card?"



    BrE users are saying "by card" works form them:




    • By card (BrE)



    It wasn't mentioned in the OP and I completely forgot, but @JeremyC points out that you can say by check/cheque:




    • By check (AmE)

    • By cheque (BrE)



    I think on my card is okay in a few cases:




    • You can charge it on my card.

    • You can put it on my card.



    I agree with @J.R. Charge it to my card sounds better to me.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 6





      With regards to prepositions, I generally use, "Put it on my card," but, "Charge it to my card."

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:12







    • 4





      In 'more than single word' interactions, I'd definitely use the phrase 'by card' [& probably more likely than the other option, 'with'], though I would never use the word 'charge'. I think they may be slight transpondian differences - though not sufficient to be worth a separate answer.

      – Tetsujin
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:52






    • 1





      As a Brit, I don't see anything wrong with "pay by card" - though "pay by cash" does sound wrong. Google "pay by card" (in quotes to get the exact phrase) gives many UK hits, including the websites of major companies like British Telecom (BT), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) etc.

      – alephzero
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:55












    • For the decreasing number of Brits who use cheques to pay, the word is definitely "by".

      – JeremyC
      Aug 26 '18 at 14:58















    8















    How would you like to pay?




    In short, informal interactions, such as with a cashier, it's perfectly fine to respond with one word. Or, you don't need to use a proper sentence with a subject and a verb:




    • Cash

    • Card

    • etc.



    If you need to specify, again, you can be brief:




    • Visa

    • Mastercard

    • Apple Pay

    • Debit

    • Credit

    • etc.



    If you want to use a preposition, you can use with. In my AmE opinion, you cannot use *by with cash or card:




    • With cash

    • With a/my card



    This is generally short for I will pay with cash/my card, or in response to "Will you pay with cash or card?"



    BrE users are saying "by card" works form them:




    • By card (BrE)



    It wasn't mentioned in the OP and I completely forgot, but @JeremyC points out that you can say by check/cheque:




    • By check (AmE)

    • By cheque (BrE)



    I think on my card is okay in a few cases:




    • You can charge it on my card.

    • You can put it on my card.



    I agree with @J.R. Charge it to my card sounds better to me.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 6





      With regards to prepositions, I generally use, "Put it on my card," but, "Charge it to my card."

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:12







    • 4





      In 'more than single word' interactions, I'd definitely use the phrase 'by card' [& probably more likely than the other option, 'with'], though I would never use the word 'charge'. I think they may be slight transpondian differences - though not sufficient to be worth a separate answer.

      – Tetsujin
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:52






    • 1





      As a Brit, I don't see anything wrong with "pay by card" - though "pay by cash" does sound wrong. Google "pay by card" (in quotes to get the exact phrase) gives many UK hits, including the websites of major companies like British Telecom (BT), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) etc.

      – alephzero
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:55












    • For the decreasing number of Brits who use cheques to pay, the word is definitely "by".

      – JeremyC
      Aug 26 '18 at 14:58













    8












    8








    8








    How would you like to pay?




    In short, informal interactions, such as with a cashier, it's perfectly fine to respond with one word. Or, you don't need to use a proper sentence with a subject and a verb:




    • Cash

    • Card

    • etc.



    If you need to specify, again, you can be brief:




    • Visa

    • Mastercard

    • Apple Pay

    • Debit

    • Credit

    • etc.



    If you want to use a preposition, you can use with. In my AmE opinion, you cannot use *by with cash or card:




    • With cash

    • With a/my card



    This is generally short for I will pay with cash/my card, or in response to "Will you pay with cash or card?"



    BrE users are saying "by card" works form them:




    • By card (BrE)



    It wasn't mentioned in the OP and I completely forgot, but @JeremyC points out that you can say by check/cheque:




    • By check (AmE)

    • By cheque (BrE)



    I think on my card is okay in a few cases:




    • You can charge it on my card.

    • You can put it on my card.



    I agree with @J.R. Charge it to my card sounds better to me.






    share|improve this answer
















    How would you like to pay?




    In short, informal interactions, such as with a cashier, it's perfectly fine to respond with one word. Or, you don't need to use a proper sentence with a subject and a verb:




    • Cash

    • Card

    • etc.



    If you need to specify, again, you can be brief:




    • Visa

    • Mastercard

    • Apple Pay

    • Debit

    • Credit

    • etc.



    If you want to use a preposition, you can use with. In my AmE opinion, you cannot use *by with cash or card:




    • With cash

    • With a/my card



    This is generally short for I will pay with cash/my card, or in response to "Will you pay with cash or card?"



    BrE users are saying "by card" works form them:




    • By card (BrE)



    It wasn't mentioned in the OP and I completely forgot, but @JeremyC points out that you can say by check/cheque:




    • By check (AmE)

    • By cheque (BrE)



    I think on my card is okay in a few cases:




    • You can charge it on my card.

    • You can put it on my card.



    I agree with @J.R. Charge it to my card sounds better to me.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Aug 26 '18 at 22:19

























    answered Aug 26 '18 at 9:54









    Em.Em.

    37.9k10111127




    37.9k10111127







    • 6





      With regards to prepositions, I generally use, "Put it on my card," but, "Charge it to my card."

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:12







    • 4





      In 'more than single word' interactions, I'd definitely use the phrase 'by card' [& probably more likely than the other option, 'with'], though I would never use the word 'charge'. I think they may be slight transpondian differences - though not sufficient to be worth a separate answer.

      – Tetsujin
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:52






    • 1





      As a Brit, I don't see anything wrong with "pay by card" - though "pay by cash" does sound wrong. Google "pay by card" (in quotes to get the exact phrase) gives many UK hits, including the websites of major companies like British Telecom (BT), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) etc.

      – alephzero
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:55












    • For the decreasing number of Brits who use cheques to pay, the word is definitely "by".

      – JeremyC
      Aug 26 '18 at 14:58












    • 6





      With regards to prepositions, I generally use, "Put it on my card," but, "Charge it to my card."

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:12







    • 4





      In 'more than single word' interactions, I'd definitely use the phrase 'by card' [& probably more likely than the other option, 'with'], though I would never use the word 'charge'. I think they may be slight transpondian differences - though not sufficient to be worth a separate answer.

      – Tetsujin
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:52






    • 1





      As a Brit, I don't see anything wrong with "pay by card" - though "pay by cash" does sound wrong. Google "pay by card" (in quotes to get the exact phrase) gives many UK hits, including the websites of major companies like British Telecom (BT), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) etc.

      – alephzero
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:55












    • For the decreasing number of Brits who use cheques to pay, the word is definitely "by".

      – JeremyC
      Aug 26 '18 at 14:58







    6




    6





    With regards to prepositions, I generally use, "Put it on my card," but, "Charge it to my card."

    – J.R.
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:12






    With regards to prepositions, I generally use, "Put it on my card," but, "Charge it to my card."

    – J.R.
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:12





    4




    4





    In 'more than single word' interactions, I'd definitely use the phrase 'by card' [& probably more likely than the other option, 'with'], though I would never use the word 'charge'. I think they may be slight transpondian differences - though not sufficient to be worth a separate answer.

    – Tetsujin
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:52





    In 'more than single word' interactions, I'd definitely use the phrase 'by card' [& probably more likely than the other option, 'with'], though I would never use the word 'charge'. I think they may be slight transpondian differences - though not sufficient to be worth a separate answer.

    – Tetsujin
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:52




    1




    1





    As a Brit, I don't see anything wrong with "pay by card" - though "pay by cash" does sound wrong. Google "pay by card" (in quotes to get the exact phrase) gives many UK hits, including the websites of major companies like British Telecom (BT), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) etc.

    – alephzero
    Aug 26 '18 at 12:55






    As a Brit, I don't see anything wrong with "pay by card" - though "pay by cash" does sound wrong. Google "pay by card" (in quotes to get the exact phrase) gives many UK hits, including the websites of major companies like British Telecom (BT), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) etc.

    – alephzero
    Aug 26 '18 at 12:55














    For the decreasing number of Brits who use cheques to pay, the word is definitely "by".

    – JeremyC
    Aug 26 '18 at 14:58





    For the decreasing number of Brits who use cheques to pay, the word is definitely "by".

    – JeremyC
    Aug 26 '18 at 14:58













    3














    The fewer words, the better: "Cash", "Credit", or "Debit". If they want more information, they'll ask. There was a time when they needed to know the type of card, (e.g., Visa or MasterCard), but that's rare today.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      I am British. I would invariably add 'please' to any response e.g. 'cash, please'. If I did not, I would feel I was being rude, and so might the shop worker. Usually just 'card please' will be the appropriate response. I don't know if other cultures have this 'politeness' thing as much as we do.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:38











    • I also say 'thank you' after the transaction has been successfully processed. If I am feeling light-hearted, I may gaze at the card terminal in pretended anxiety and gasp "Thank God!" when the word 'Authorised' appears on the little screen. Anything to make the transaction less impersonal.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 11:09











    • I am British too, but I would never say 'please' here. When I pay, it's me that's doing them the favour! But I do say 'thank you' after the transaction if I'm not feeling especially grumpy.

      – TonyK
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:17















    3














    The fewer words, the better: "Cash", "Credit", or "Debit". If they want more information, they'll ask. There was a time when they needed to know the type of card, (e.g., Visa or MasterCard), but that's rare today.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      I am British. I would invariably add 'please' to any response e.g. 'cash, please'. If I did not, I would feel I was being rude, and so might the shop worker. Usually just 'card please' will be the appropriate response. I don't know if other cultures have this 'politeness' thing as much as we do.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:38











    • I also say 'thank you' after the transaction has been successfully processed. If I am feeling light-hearted, I may gaze at the card terminal in pretended anxiety and gasp "Thank God!" when the word 'Authorised' appears on the little screen. Anything to make the transaction less impersonal.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 11:09











    • I am British too, but I would never say 'please' here. When I pay, it's me that's doing them the favour! But I do say 'thank you' after the transaction if I'm not feeling especially grumpy.

      – TonyK
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:17













    3












    3








    3







    The fewer words, the better: "Cash", "Credit", or "Debit". If they want more information, they'll ask. There was a time when they needed to know the type of card, (e.g., Visa or MasterCard), but that's rare today.






    share|improve this answer















    The fewer words, the better: "Cash", "Credit", or "Debit". If they want more information, they'll ask. There was a time when they needed to know the type of card, (e.g., Visa or MasterCard), but that's rare today.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Aug 26 '18 at 9:55









    J.R.

    98.6k8127244




    98.6k8127244










    answered Aug 26 '18 at 9:54









    oftenconfusedoftenconfused

    57617




    57617







    • 2





      I am British. I would invariably add 'please' to any response e.g. 'cash, please'. If I did not, I would feel I was being rude, and so might the shop worker. Usually just 'card please' will be the appropriate response. I don't know if other cultures have this 'politeness' thing as much as we do.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:38











    • I also say 'thank you' after the transaction has been successfully processed. If I am feeling light-hearted, I may gaze at the card terminal in pretended anxiety and gasp "Thank God!" when the word 'Authorised' appears on the little screen. Anything to make the transaction less impersonal.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 11:09











    • I am British too, but I would never say 'please' here. When I pay, it's me that's doing them the favour! But I do say 'thank you' after the transaction if I'm not feeling especially grumpy.

      – TonyK
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:17












    • 2





      I am British. I would invariably add 'please' to any response e.g. 'cash, please'. If I did not, I would feel I was being rude, and so might the shop worker. Usually just 'card please' will be the appropriate response. I don't know if other cultures have this 'politeness' thing as much as we do.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 10:38











    • I also say 'thank you' after the transaction has been successfully processed. If I am feeling light-hearted, I may gaze at the card terminal in pretended anxiety and gasp "Thank God!" when the word 'Authorised' appears on the little screen. Anything to make the transaction less impersonal.

      – Michael Harvey
      Aug 26 '18 at 11:09











    • I am British too, but I would never say 'please' here. When I pay, it's me that's doing them the favour! But I do say 'thank you' after the transaction if I'm not feeling especially grumpy.

      – TonyK
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:17







    2




    2





    I am British. I would invariably add 'please' to any response e.g. 'cash, please'. If I did not, I would feel I was being rude, and so might the shop worker. Usually just 'card please' will be the appropriate response. I don't know if other cultures have this 'politeness' thing as much as we do.

    – Michael Harvey
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:38





    I am British. I would invariably add 'please' to any response e.g. 'cash, please'. If I did not, I would feel I was being rude, and so might the shop worker. Usually just 'card please' will be the appropriate response. I don't know if other cultures have this 'politeness' thing as much as we do.

    – Michael Harvey
    Aug 26 '18 at 10:38













    I also say 'thank you' after the transaction has been successfully processed. If I am feeling light-hearted, I may gaze at the card terminal in pretended anxiety and gasp "Thank God!" when the word 'Authorised' appears on the little screen. Anything to make the transaction less impersonal.

    – Michael Harvey
    Aug 26 '18 at 11:09





    I also say 'thank you' after the transaction has been successfully processed. If I am feeling light-hearted, I may gaze at the card terminal in pretended anxiety and gasp "Thank God!" when the word 'Authorised' appears on the little screen. Anything to make the transaction less impersonal.

    – Michael Harvey
    Aug 26 '18 at 11:09













    I am British too, but I would never say 'please' here. When I pay, it's me that's doing them the favour! But I do say 'thank you' after the transaction if I'm not feeling especially grumpy.

    – TonyK
    Aug 26 '18 at 21:17





    I am British too, but I would never say 'please' here. When I pay, it's me that's doing them the favour! But I do say 'thank you' after the transaction if I'm not feeling especially grumpy.

    – TonyK
    Aug 26 '18 at 21:17











    2














    Honestly, I usually just hold up the card (if I’m going to use it and there’s a terminal I need to use it in), or hand them the card (if I don’t have a terminal) or the cash. No need to say anything, though as stated above, a single word of “card” or “cash” is generally sufficient, and if they need to know more (e.g. credit or debit), they’ll ask. [United States]






    share|improve this answer























    • With some outfits, such as Square, you are limited: They only take Visa and MC, but not debit, discover, Amex. As a Square using vendor, I rattle off that we take cash, email transfer, cheque, visa, mc as a preface to "how would you like to pay"

      – Sherwood Botsford
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:53















    2














    Honestly, I usually just hold up the card (if I’m going to use it and there’s a terminal I need to use it in), or hand them the card (if I don’t have a terminal) or the cash. No need to say anything, though as stated above, a single word of “card” or “cash” is generally sufficient, and if they need to know more (e.g. credit or debit), they’ll ask. [United States]






    share|improve this answer























    • With some outfits, such as Square, you are limited: They only take Visa and MC, but not debit, discover, Amex. As a Square using vendor, I rattle off that we take cash, email transfer, cheque, visa, mc as a preface to "how would you like to pay"

      – Sherwood Botsford
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:53













    2












    2








    2







    Honestly, I usually just hold up the card (if I’m going to use it and there’s a terminal I need to use it in), or hand them the card (if I don’t have a terminal) or the cash. No need to say anything, though as stated above, a single word of “card” or “cash” is generally sufficient, and if they need to know more (e.g. credit or debit), they’ll ask. [United States]






    share|improve this answer













    Honestly, I usually just hold up the card (if I’m going to use it and there’s a terminal I need to use it in), or hand them the card (if I don’t have a terminal) or the cash. No need to say anything, though as stated above, a single word of “card” or “cash” is generally sufficient, and if they need to know more (e.g. credit or debit), they’ll ask. [United States]







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Aug 26 '18 at 12:15









    bogardpdbogardpd

    1213




    1213












    • With some outfits, such as Square, you are limited: They only take Visa and MC, but not debit, discover, Amex. As a Square using vendor, I rattle off that we take cash, email transfer, cheque, visa, mc as a preface to "how would you like to pay"

      – Sherwood Botsford
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:53

















    • With some outfits, such as Square, you are limited: They only take Visa and MC, but not debit, discover, Amex. As a Square using vendor, I rattle off that we take cash, email transfer, cheque, visa, mc as a preface to "how would you like to pay"

      – Sherwood Botsford
      Aug 26 '18 at 12:53
















    With some outfits, such as Square, you are limited: They only take Visa and MC, but not debit, discover, Amex. As a Square using vendor, I rattle off that we take cash, email transfer, cheque, visa, mc as a preface to "how would you like to pay"

    – Sherwood Botsford
    Aug 26 '18 at 12:53





    With some outfits, such as Square, you are limited: They only take Visa and MC, but not debit, discover, Amex. As a Square using vendor, I rattle off that we take cash, email transfer, cheque, visa, mc as a preface to "how would you like to pay"

    – Sherwood Botsford
    Aug 26 '18 at 12:53











    2














    Depends on the context. People usually say "By card". The merchant also usually doesn't care*, because they'll plug your card in a machine, that reads any of them.



    *Sometimes merchants may be unable to support a few cards, such as AMEX. In that case it might be useful to say if yours is a Visa/Mastercard/etc.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      In Britain, where the difference between credit and debit cards is of no significance at the point of sale, people just say "Card". "Cash or card?", "Card only" are common expressions to hear or see

      – Colin Fine
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:53







    • 2





      Your answer doesn't account for the Discover card – which may be important since not all vendors accept it.

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:56






    • 1





      In the US you may be asked "credit or debit" when the merchant's register or payment processor makes the distinction something that the cashier has to act on. But this isn't common anymore; most of the time the machine will (or won't) ask you this.

      – Michael Hampton
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:40











    • @MichaelHampton Agreed. Its rare that a merchant has to figure out which type of card you're using.

      – goelakash
      Aug 27 '18 at 4:25















    2














    Depends on the context. People usually say "By card". The merchant also usually doesn't care*, because they'll plug your card in a machine, that reads any of them.



    *Sometimes merchants may be unable to support a few cards, such as AMEX. In that case it might be useful to say if yours is a Visa/Mastercard/etc.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      In Britain, where the difference between credit and debit cards is of no significance at the point of sale, people just say "Card". "Cash or card?", "Card only" are common expressions to hear or see

      – Colin Fine
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:53







    • 2





      Your answer doesn't account for the Discover card – which may be important since not all vendors accept it.

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:56






    • 1





      In the US you may be asked "credit or debit" when the merchant's register or payment processor makes the distinction something that the cashier has to act on. But this isn't common anymore; most of the time the machine will (or won't) ask you this.

      – Michael Hampton
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:40











    • @MichaelHampton Agreed. Its rare that a merchant has to figure out which type of card you're using.

      – goelakash
      Aug 27 '18 at 4:25













    2












    2








    2







    Depends on the context. People usually say "By card". The merchant also usually doesn't care*, because they'll plug your card in a machine, that reads any of them.



    *Sometimes merchants may be unable to support a few cards, such as AMEX. In that case it might be useful to say if yours is a Visa/Mastercard/etc.






    share|improve this answer















    Depends on the context. People usually say "By card". The merchant also usually doesn't care*, because they'll plug your card in a machine, that reads any of them.



    *Sometimes merchants may be unable to support a few cards, such as AMEX. In that case it might be useful to say if yours is a Visa/Mastercard/etc.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Aug 27 '18 at 5:23

























    answered Aug 26 '18 at 9:41









    goelakashgoelakash

    1213




    1213







    • 2





      In Britain, where the difference between credit and debit cards is of no significance at the point of sale, people just say "Card". "Cash or card?", "Card only" are common expressions to hear or see

      – Colin Fine
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:53







    • 2





      Your answer doesn't account for the Discover card – which may be important since not all vendors accept it.

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:56






    • 1





      In the US you may be asked "credit or debit" when the merchant's register or payment processor makes the distinction something that the cashier has to act on. But this isn't common anymore; most of the time the machine will (or won't) ask you this.

      – Michael Hampton
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:40











    • @MichaelHampton Agreed. Its rare that a merchant has to figure out which type of card you're using.

      – goelakash
      Aug 27 '18 at 4:25












    • 2





      In Britain, where the difference between credit and debit cards is of no significance at the point of sale, people just say "Card". "Cash or card?", "Card only" are common expressions to hear or see

      – Colin Fine
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:53







    • 2





      Your answer doesn't account for the Discover card – which may be important since not all vendors accept it.

      – J.R.
      Aug 26 '18 at 9:56






    • 1





      In the US you may be asked "credit or debit" when the merchant's register or payment processor makes the distinction something that the cashier has to act on. But this isn't common anymore; most of the time the machine will (or won't) ask you this.

      – Michael Hampton
      Aug 26 '18 at 21:40











    • @MichaelHampton Agreed. Its rare that a merchant has to figure out which type of card you're using.

      – goelakash
      Aug 27 '18 at 4:25







    2




    2





    In Britain, where the difference between credit and debit cards is of no significance at the point of sale, people just say "Card". "Cash or card?", "Card only" are common expressions to hear or see

    – Colin Fine
    Aug 26 '18 at 9:53






    In Britain, where the difference between credit and debit cards is of no significance at the point of sale, people just say "Card". "Cash or card?", "Card only" are common expressions to hear or see

    – Colin Fine
    Aug 26 '18 at 9:53





    2




    2





    Your answer doesn't account for the Discover card – which may be important since not all vendors accept it.

    – J.R.
    Aug 26 '18 at 9:56





    Your answer doesn't account for the Discover card – which may be important since not all vendors accept it.

    – J.R.
    Aug 26 '18 at 9:56




    1




    1





    In the US you may be asked "credit or debit" when the merchant's register or payment processor makes the distinction something that the cashier has to act on. But this isn't common anymore; most of the time the machine will (or won't) ask you this.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 26 '18 at 21:40





    In the US you may be asked "credit or debit" when the merchant's register or payment processor makes the distinction something that the cashier has to act on. But this isn't common anymore; most of the time the machine will (or won't) ask you this.

    – Michael Hampton
    Aug 26 '18 at 21:40













    @MichaelHampton Agreed. Its rare that a merchant has to figure out which type of card you're using.

    – goelakash
    Aug 27 '18 at 4:25





    @MichaelHampton Agreed. Its rare that a merchant has to figure out which type of card you're using.

    – goelakash
    Aug 27 '18 at 4:25











    1














    The correct answer depends on what question they asked, exactly.



    If they ask "How would you like to pay?" you can say something like "cash", or "by credit card", or "debit card, please". Other answers talk about the exact choice of words to use here.



    If they ask "Credit or debit?", then you have to use either the word "credit" or the word "debit". This will affect the way that the payment is processed, and the details are a little complicated. It's fine to say "credit" if it's a credit card and "debit" for debit cards. If you'd like more information, try doing a Google search for "Should I say credit or debit?"



    Likewise, if they ask "Visa or MasterCard?" (or "What type of card is it?"), then you have to tell them who your card processor is: Visa or Mastercard (or Discover or American Express).



    If you're paying by cash and they ask "credit or debit" or "Visa or MasterCard", you can say: "Oh, uh, I've got cash, is that all right?"






    share|improve this answer



























      1














      The correct answer depends on what question they asked, exactly.



      If they ask "How would you like to pay?" you can say something like "cash", or "by credit card", or "debit card, please". Other answers talk about the exact choice of words to use here.



      If they ask "Credit or debit?", then you have to use either the word "credit" or the word "debit". This will affect the way that the payment is processed, and the details are a little complicated. It's fine to say "credit" if it's a credit card and "debit" for debit cards. If you'd like more information, try doing a Google search for "Should I say credit or debit?"



      Likewise, if they ask "Visa or MasterCard?" (or "What type of card is it?"), then you have to tell them who your card processor is: Visa or Mastercard (or Discover or American Express).



      If you're paying by cash and they ask "credit or debit" or "Visa or MasterCard", you can say: "Oh, uh, I've got cash, is that all right?"






      share|improve this answer

























        1












        1








        1







        The correct answer depends on what question they asked, exactly.



        If they ask "How would you like to pay?" you can say something like "cash", or "by credit card", or "debit card, please". Other answers talk about the exact choice of words to use here.



        If they ask "Credit or debit?", then you have to use either the word "credit" or the word "debit". This will affect the way that the payment is processed, and the details are a little complicated. It's fine to say "credit" if it's a credit card and "debit" for debit cards. If you'd like more information, try doing a Google search for "Should I say credit or debit?"



        Likewise, if they ask "Visa or MasterCard?" (or "What type of card is it?"), then you have to tell them who your card processor is: Visa or Mastercard (or Discover or American Express).



        If you're paying by cash and they ask "credit or debit" or "Visa or MasterCard", you can say: "Oh, uh, I've got cash, is that all right?"






        share|improve this answer













        The correct answer depends on what question they asked, exactly.



        If they ask "How would you like to pay?" you can say something like "cash", or "by credit card", or "debit card, please". Other answers talk about the exact choice of words to use here.



        If they ask "Credit or debit?", then you have to use either the word "credit" or the word "debit". This will affect the way that the payment is processed, and the details are a little complicated. It's fine to say "credit" if it's a credit card and "debit" for debit cards. If you'd like more information, try doing a Google search for "Should I say credit or debit?"



        Likewise, if they ask "Visa or MasterCard?" (or "What type of card is it?"), then you have to tell them who your card processor is: Visa or Mastercard (or Discover or American Express).



        If you're paying by cash and they ask "credit or debit" or "Visa or MasterCard", you can say: "Oh, uh, I've got cash, is that all right?"







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Aug 26 '18 at 22:08









        Tanner SwettTanner Swett

        1,351610




        1,351610





















            0














            Generic Answers Are Usually Better



            I will answer from my own perspective as both a consumer and a business owner in the United States. Here, the question is generally asked because the cashier needs to press the right key on a point-of-sale system to prepare the transaction for payment. The generic choices are typically:



            • cash

            • check

            • debit

            • credit

            Any of these four are acceptable answers to a generic question from cashiers. However, some point-of-sale systems differentiate between different credit card systems and networks, or have separate readers, PIN pads, or other devices depending on the payment type. If it truly matters, the cashier may ask you “Visa or MasterCard?“, or ask other clarifying questions, so that they know which keys to press on the register. They may also need to know which of their various payment peripherals to present or direct you to.



            The various examples you gave all seem like reasonable responses, but are possibly too detailed for most routine transactions. Answering a generic question with more detail is sometimes a polite way to ensure that a less widely-accepted payment method (e.g. American Express, Discover, or Google Pay) will be okay before presenting it, but this is neither required nor expected in most situations.






            share|improve this answer























            • Are cheques still common enough in the US to even be in that list any more? In the UK there hasn't been a high-street retailer that will still take cheques in at least a decade.

              – Tetsujin
              Aug 27 '18 at 8:11















            0














            Generic Answers Are Usually Better



            I will answer from my own perspective as both a consumer and a business owner in the United States. Here, the question is generally asked because the cashier needs to press the right key on a point-of-sale system to prepare the transaction for payment. The generic choices are typically:



            • cash

            • check

            • debit

            • credit

            Any of these four are acceptable answers to a generic question from cashiers. However, some point-of-sale systems differentiate between different credit card systems and networks, or have separate readers, PIN pads, or other devices depending on the payment type. If it truly matters, the cashier may ask you “Visa or MasterCard?“, or ask other clarifying questions, so that they know which keys to press on the register. They may also need to know which of their various payment peripherals to present or direct you to.



            The various examples you gave all seem like reasonable responses, but are possibly too detailed for most routine transactions. Answering a generic question with more detail is sometimes a polite way to ensure that a less widely-accepted payment method (e.g. American Express, Discover, or Google Pay) will be okay before presenting it, but this is neither required nor expected in most situations.






            share|improve this answer























            • Are cheques still common enough in the US to even be in that list any more? In the UK there hasn't been a high-street retailer that will still take cheques in at least a decade.

              – Tetsujin
              Aug 27 '18 at 8:11













            0












            0








            0







            Generic Answers Are Usually Better



            I will answer from my own perspective as both a consumer and a business owner in the United States. Here, the question is generally asked because the cashier needs to press the right key on a point-of-sale system to prepare the transaction for payment. The generic choices are typically:



            • cash

            • check

            • debit

            • credit

            Any of these four are acceptable answers to a generic question from cashiers. However, some point-of-sale systems differentiate between different credit card systems and networks, or have separate readers, PIN pads, or other devices depending on the payment type. If it truly matters, the cashier may ask you “Visa or MasterCard?“, or ask other clarifying questions, so that they know which keys to press on the register. They may also need to know which of their various payment peripherals to present or direct you to.



            The various examples you gave all seem like reasonable responses, but are possibly too detailed for most routine transactions. Answering a generic question with more detail is sometimes a polite way to ensure that a less widely-accepted payment method (e.g. American Express, Discover, or Google Pay) will be okay before presenting it, but this is neither required nor expected in most situations.






            share|improve this answer













            Generic Answers Are Usually Better



            I will answer from my own perspective as both a consumer and a business owner in the United States. Here, the question is generally asked because the cashier needs to press the right key on a point-of-sale system to prepare the transaction for payment. The generic choices are typically:



            • cash

            • check

            • debit

            • credit

            Any of these four are acceptable answers to a generic question from cashiers. However, some point-of-sale systems differentiate between different credit card systems and networks, or have separate readers, PIN pads, or other devices depending on the payment type. If it truly matters, the cashier may ask you “Visa or MasterCard?“, or ask other clarifying questions, so that they know which keys to press on the register. They may also need to know which of their various payment peripherals to present or direct you to.



            The various examples you gave all seem like reasonable responses, but are possibly too detailed for most routine transactions. Answering a generic question with more detail is sometimes a polite way to ensure that a less widely-accepted payment method (e.g. American Express, Discover, or Google Pay) will be okay before presenting it, but this is neither required nor expected in most situations.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Aug 26 '18 at 22:50









            CodeGnomeCodeGnome

            51427




            51427












            • Are cheques still common enough in the US to even be in that list any more? In the UK there hasn't been a high-street retailer that will still take cheques in at least a decade.

              – Tetsujin
              Aug 27 '18 at 8:11

















            • Are cheques still common enough in the US to even be in that list any more? In the UK there hasn't been a high-street retailer that will still take cheques in at least a decade.

              – Tetsujin
              Aug 27 '18 at 8:11
















            Are cheques still common enough in the US to even be in that list any more? In the UK there hasn't been a high-street retailer that will still take cheques in at least a decade.

            – Tetsujin
            Aug 27 '18 at 8:11





            Are cheques still common enough in the US to even be in that list any more? In the UK there hasn't been a high-street retailer that will still take cheques in at least a decade.

            – Tetsujin
            Aug 27 '18 at 8:11

















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