Auto dealers are constantly looking for meaningful ways to protect their margins, optimize operational costs, and streamline B2B transactions. If your dealership accepts business and commercial credit cards—whether for fleet sales, bulk OEM parts distribution, warranty payments, or commercial service accounts—a critical Visa rule change that directly impacts your processing costs and bottom line is reshaping how commercial card transactions are processed.
Visa launched the Commercial Enhanced Data Program (CEDP) in April 2025, which fundamentally changes how commercial card transactions are processed and categorized. As Visa completes the final phase of the rollout in April 2026, here is everything your dealership needs to know to avoid rising card fees and maintain profitability.
What is Visa CEDP?
Historically, merchants who processed business, corporate, or government credit cards could qualify for lower interchange rates by voluntarily submitting Level 2 data (like sales tax) or Level 3 data (detailed line-item information). The CEDP consolidates these old incentive programs into a single, stricter framework designed to promote high-quality, accurate data for commercial transactions.
Visa is strictly enforcing this program, actively examining Level 3 data and replacing previous incentive structures. Crucially, by April 18, 2026, Visa will officially discontinue all standard Level 2 programs, with fleet and fuel card programs continuing under their own data requirements. Going forward, dealerships must submit invoice-quality Level 3 data to qualify for the most favorable interchange rates.
The Data Requirement: What Dealerships Must Provide
Under CEDP, simply passing along the sales tax amount is no longer enough. Your systems must now capture and transmit comprehensive Level 3 line-item details. For a dealership’s parts or service department, this means your payment gateway needs to process specific data points such as:
- Item descriptions (e.g., specific part names or service descriptions)
- Item quantities and unit of measure
- Freight and shipping amounts
- Unit costs and line-item totals
- Item discount amounts, commodity codes, and duty amounts
The Financial Impact: Risks and Rewards
CEDP is not just a regulatory update; it is a revenue-impacting event. Visa uses machine learning to validate the quality of the data your dealership submits, categorizing your business as “Verified” or “Non-Verified” after a review period of up to 30 days.
If your dealership fails to provide complete data, or if Visa detects ongoing quality issues—such as leaving fields blank, using single letters, or submitting overly generic product descriptions—you risk losing your verified status. Transactions lacking verified enhanced data will default into higher-cost fee brackets, resulting in 0.5% to 1% higher interchange fees.
However, there is a significant upside for verified merchants. While a 0.05% participation fee is applied to all CEDP transactions, the overall interchange rates for verified data have been reduced by roughly 7% to 10%. Large Ticket purchases see the most significant rate reductions, which is incredibly beneficial for wholesale auto transactions. For instance, under CEDP, the Corporate Large Ticket and Purchasing Large Ticket rates drop from 1.45% + $35 down to 1.30% + $35.
How to Prepare Your Dealership Today
With the April 2026 Level 2 sunset now part of Visa’s rollout timeline, dealerships must take action to protect margins. Here is a step-by-step guide:
- Audit Your Data Flows: Verify that your point-of-sale (POS), dealership management system (DMS), and payment gateway can capture all required Level 3 fields and transmit them accurately.
- Automate Your Compliance: Relying on staff to manually enter line-item data can lead to validation errors. Modern payment gateways can offer automatic Level 3 data enrichment, filling in missing invoice numbers, tax, and remittance details to ensure full compliance before the transaction is submitted.
- Educate Your Team: Train your accounting, finance, and fixed-operations staff on the importance of quality data and how to spot errors. Visa monitors this status monthly.
- Re-Evaluate Surcharging: This regulatory shift provides a compelling reason for dealerships to explore compliant surcharging programs to help offset B2B processing fees.
Accepting commercial cards is a vital part of your dealership’s operations, whether you act as a parts distributor, a wholesaler, or a fleet servicer. By upgrading your payment technology and ensuring CEDP compliance before the final April 2026 deadline, you can avoid unexpected penalties and secure the lowest possible interchange rates for your business.
Ensure CEDP Compliance and Protect Your Margins
CEDP is more than a regulatory update. It has a direct impact on your dealership’s bottom line. Priority DMS provides the technology, tools, and expertise to capture accurate Level 3 data, qualify for reduced interchange rates, and maximize savings.
Contact us today to schedule your CEDP readiness assessment and learn how you can protect your margins.