RevTrak $2 Flat Fee Equals 20% Surcharge on $10 School Lunch Deposit

RevTrak’s Hidden School Payment Fee: A National Scheme Preying on Families

RevTrak’s Hidden School Payment Fee: A Scheme Targeting Struggling Families

The nation’s largest K‑12 payment processor adds an undisclosed surcharge at checkout, hitting low‑income parents hardest and violating credit card network rules.

Millions of parents across the United States are being charged a hidden fee every time they pay for their child’s school lunch, field trip, or technology fee online. The fee, labeled a “Software Admin Fee” by payment processor RevTrak, Inc., is not disclosed until the final checkout screen. It functions as a credit card surcharge, violates card network rules, and disproportionately punishes families who can only afford to add small amounts to lunch accounts.

RevTrak, a Minnesota-based corporation, partners with over 1,300 school districts nationwide. Its payment portal is deeply integrated with student information systems like Skyward, used by more than 2,400 districts. Parents are forced to use RevTrak’s platform to complete any online school payment, but they are never warned about the additional fee until they have already committed to the transaction.

KEY FINDING: The Software Admin Fee is a credit/debit card surcharge that RevTrak collects entirely for itself. Merchant agreements show that RevTrak charges school districts a processing fee, then tacks on a higher “Service Fee” to parents to cover that cost — and pocket the difference. In one example, RevTrak charged a 4.15% fee to parents to offset a 3.99% processing cost.

How the Hidden Fee Works

When a parent logs into their school’s portal (e.g., Skyward) to pay a fee or add lunch money, the system displays the amount due. There is no mention of any additional charge. After confirming the amount, the parent is automatically transferred to RevTrak’s payment portal, where they must create an account and accept terms of use. Those terms do not authorize a Software Admin Fee. Only on the final payment screen does the fee appear, added to the total.

This practice is known as “drip pricing” — revealing mandatory charges only at the last moment. The Federal Trade Commission has identified drip pricing as deceptive. Credit card network rules (Visa, Mastercard, Discover, American Express) require surcharges to be disclosed clearly at both point of entry and point of transaction, with the exact amount and a statement that the surcharge is not greater than the merchant’s cost of acceptance. RevTrak’s fee appears without these required disclosures.

“Parents face a coercive choice: either pay the unauthorized and undisclosed Software Admin Fee every time they make a school payment online, or refuse to pay the fee and leave their child without lunch money.”

Violating Card Network Rules — and Public Trust

Visa’s rules, for instance, mandate that any surcharge be disclosed “in a minimum 10-point Arial font” on the first page that references credit card brands and again at checkout. RevTrak’s interface shows no surcharge warning on the Skyward side nor during account creation. Moreover, the fee often exceeds permissible caps. In many districts, RevTrak charges a flat $2 per transaction. For a parent adding $10 to a lunch account, that’s an effective 20% surcharge — far above Visa’s 3% maximum.

Even when structured as a percentage, the fee can exceed caps. A 4.15% surcharge documented in one merchant agreement is higher than allowed by any major card network. Because RevTrak acts as the school district’s payment agent, it is bound by the same rules.

Disproportionate Burden on Low‑Income Families

The flat-fee model creates a regressive tax on those who can least afford it. Wealthier parents can add $200 at once, making the $2 fee a negligible 1%. A parent living paycheck to paycheck, however, may only be able to add $10 or $20 at a time, paying the $2 fee repeatedly. Over a school year, these fees can accumulate to hundreds of dollars in hidden costs.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has noted that even when schools offer alternative payment methods (cash, check, money order), those options carry their own burdens: transportation costs, time off work, or fees for money orders. For many families, online payment is the only practical option, making the hidden fee unavoidable.

Corporate Greed Embedded in Public Education

RevTrak profits twice: once from monthly fees charged to school districts, and again from the Software Admin Fee passed directly to parents. The company’s merchant agreements reveal that the fee is designed to shift processing costs onto families while generating extra revenue. The Avon Grove School District publicly clarified that it “does not receive any part of the software administration fee.” Yet the fee is presented in a way that leads parents to believe it is a school‑mandated charge.

Internal documents show RevTrak’s tight integration with Skyward gives it near‑monopoly power in many districts. Parents cannot choose an alternative payment processor; they are locked into RevTrak’s portal once they confirm the payment amount in Skyward. This captive audience allows RevTrak to impose fees with little accountability.

Systemic Deception with Real Harm

RevTrak’s own terms of use and FAQ pages make no mention of the Software Admin Fee. The fee is not authorized during account creation. It appears only after parents have entered payment details and are ready to click “submit.” This late disclosure exploits the psychological sunk‑cost effect — after investing time and effort, parents are unlikely to abandon the transaction, especially when their child’s lunch or field trip hangs in the balance.

Credit card network rules exist precisely to prevent such bait‑and‑switch tactics. By failing to comply, RevTrak not only violates industry standards but also consumer protection laws in Minnesota and Illinois, where legal action is now underway.

The Bigger Picture: Junk Fees in Essential Services

RevTrak’s scheme is part of a broader pattern of corporate actors inserting hidden fees into necessary transactions. From ticket sales to hotel bookings, drip pricing erodes trust and transfers wealth from consumers to corporations. When it infiltrates public education — a service every family must access — the harm is particularly insidious. Parents have no alternative but to engage with the school’s chosen payment system, making them captive to whatever fees RevTrak decides to impose.

As one school district’s notice to parents stated: “RevTrak charges a software administration fee for their online payment service. The Avon Grove School District does not receive any part of the software administration fee.” Yet without proper disclosure, many parents remain unaware that they are padding a private company’s bottom line, not supporting their child’s school.

BOTTOM LINE: RevTrak’s hidden fee is a classic junk fee — disclosed only at checkout, exceeding legal surcharge limits, and hitting low‑income families hardest. The practice is under legal scrutiny, but until regulators or courts intervene, millions of parents will continue to be charged without consent.

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Aleeia
Aleeia

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