
We’ve talked before about the benefits of embedded payments in legal billing solutions. This critical feature streamlines billing and payment workflows, handles payments and reconciliations within one system, allows for funding separate accounts, reduces errors, and saves time. And perhaps most important, it enables clients to pay directly from a digital invoice, making it easier for them to do business with you so you get paid faster.
When clients choose to pay with a credit card, however, that payment comes with a cost to your firm. Processing fees can chip away at profitability, forcing you to decide whether to absorb those costs or pass them along.
Credit card convenience fees offer one solution to compensate for card processing fees, but they’re governed by a patchwork of state laws that can make compliance tricky. Understanding where the fees are allowed and how to implement them correctly will help you stay compliant while protecting your bottom line.
In this article you’ll learn how payment processing works for law firms, how credit card convenience fees function, when they’re lawful, what state laws your firm must watch, and best practices for implementing them effectively.
A credit card convenience fee is an additional fee that is added to a transaction when a client pays with a credit card. It’s designed to offset the cost of credit card processing fees, which typically range from 2% to 3% of the transaction total.
Be aware that credit card networks, such as Visa and Mastercard, have rules and limitations for convenience fees, including:
Credit card convenience fees are legal in most states, but not all. And some states that allow convenience fees have specific rules to follow. Your law firm may operate across state lines, handle clients located in different jurisdictions, or accept payments from clients residing in other states, so you cannot assume one-size-fits-all for convenience fees.
Note: Convenience fee laws change frequently and often are subject to litigation. Stay updated and verify convenience fee laws directly with your state.
As of November 2025, convenience fees are not allowed in:
As of November 2025, convenience fees are allowed, with contingencies, in:
| California | Nevada |
| Colorado | New Jersey |
| Florida | New York |
| Georgia | Oklahoma |
| Kansas | Texas |
| Minnesota | Wyoming |
| Nebraska |
Contingencies can include allowing surcharging up to a certain percentage, prohibiting convenience fees from exceeding the merchant’s cost of card processing, and others. Check with the state to understand all rules and regulations.
Remaining compliant with convenience fee laws goes beyond states’ rules. The decision to charge fees may intersect with ethics rules regarding reasonable fees, client disclosure, billing practices, and data security responsibilities.
Furthermore, law firms that accept credit card payments must comply with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS). These standards are designed to protect sensitive cardholder data by requiring secure payment processing, encrypted transmission, and restricted access to payment information.
Centerbase Payments, powered by Stripe, is PCI DSS Level 1 compliant (the highest level of certification) ensuring that all client transactions are processed securely without firms needing to manage compliance directly.
Because Centerbase Payments is fully embedded in the Centerbase platform, law firms don’t handle or store card data directly, which significantly reduces their PCI scope and compliance burden.
For most law firms, deciding whether to add a convenience fee to credit card payments depends on balancing financial efficiency, client satisfaction, and compliance. Before you decide, evaluate both the cost-benefit impact and the operational complexity of implementing a convenience fee program.
Start by considering these key factors:
Before your firm enables convenience fees, take these best-practice steps to ensure a smooth rollout:
These actions not only protect your firm but also ensure a positive client experience that aligns with transparency and professionalism.
Managing convenience fees manually can be error-prone and time-consuming, especially when your billing and payments systems are separate. An embedded payments solution like Centerbase Payments integrates payments directly into your legal billing platform and allows you to:
This seamless experience helps firms get paid up to 20% faster while maintaining full compliance and client satisfaction.
Credit card convenience fees can be a smart way for your firm to offset rising processing costs, but only if they’re implemented correctly. Understanding the laws governing convenience fees and using technology that automates compliance can save your firm time, reduce risk, and preserve your clients’ trust in you.
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