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Next Gen Econ > Debt > The Cash Penalty: Why Paying Your Bills with Money Orders Now Costs 1% More in 2026
Debt

The Cash Penalty: Why Paying Your Bills with Money Orders Now Costs 1% More in 2026

NGEC By NGEC Last updated: January 17, 2026 8 Min Read
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Image source: shutterstock.com

If you pay bills in cash-like ways because it’s simple, familiar, or the only option that works with your situation, 2026 may feel like a rude surprise. A lot of people who rely on money orders are discovering that “safe and old-school” can now come with an extra cost that didn’t exist before. The frustration is that the fee often shows up quietly, baked into the total, and it can feel like you’re getting punished for not paying digitally. The good news is you can avoid most of the added cost once you know when it applies and what alternatives still count as low-fee. Here’s what’s changing and how to protect your budget.

What Changed in 2026

A new federal 1% excise tax applies to certain remittance transfers starting January 1, 2026. The key detail is the payment method: the tax applies when a sender funds the transfer with cash or “similar physical instruments,” including money orders. Providers have to collect the tax as part of the transaction, so it shows up as a direct add-on rather than a “maybe” fee. This change is often described as a “cash penalty” because it hits paper-based payments instead of card- or account-funded transfers.

Why Paper Payments Get Targeted

From the government’s perspective, paper-funded transfers are easier to track through providers than through the broader cash economy. Providers also shoulder new compliance and reporting burdens, which can encourage them to steer people toward digital methods that are cheaper to process. Analysts summarizing the law note the 1% tax is tied to remittance transfers and collected by the transfer provider, not by your biller directly. The important takeaway is that the “extra 1%” isn’t a universal bill-paying fee on every transaction in America. It’s a specific rule that shows up when you’re using paper-based funding for certain transfers.

Paying Bills With Money Orders Costs More

The easiest way to feel this change is when you’re paying bills indirectly by sending funds to someone else, especially across borders, and you fund that transfer with money orders. In that situation, the 1% tax can get added on top of whatever fee the provider already charges for the transfer. Some people also experience “one-percent-ish” pain even on domestic bills because they pay to purchase money orders and then pay additional processing fees through in-person bill pay networks. USPS, for example, charges a set fee based on the amount of the postal money order, which adds cost before you even mail it. So while not every bill payment is automatically 1% higher, the total can absolutely feel that way when fees stack.

Who Gets Hit the Hardest

This lands hardest on people who are unbanked or underbanked, or anyone who avoids online payments for safety, privacy, or budgeting reasons. It also affects households that use money orders to manage rent, utilities, or family support when they don’t have consistent bank access. Many immigrant families that rely on cash or paper methods to send support abroad will see the 1% add-on specifically because of the funding method. Even if 1% sounds small, it becomes real money when transfers happen weekly, or when you’re moving larger amounts to cover recurring obligations. The “cash penalty” is less about one transaction and more about repetition.

Three Ways to Avoid the Extra 1%

First, whenever possible, switch to bank account (ACH) funding or debit-card funding for transfers, because the tax applies to cash and paper funding methods, not every type of payment. Second, if you’re using a money transfer provider, ask what funding methods avoid the tax and confirm the total cost before you hit “send,” because providers are already explaining which transactions get the 1% add-on. Third, for regular household bills, explore fee-free options like direct bank draft, online bill pay through your bank, or in-person payment locations your biller lists as “no-fee” alternatives. If you don’t have a bank account, a local credit union “second chance” account can sometimes reduce the need for paper payments without requiring perfect banking history. The point is to change the funding path, not to change your entire life.

If You Still Need Paper Payments, Reduce the Damage

If you must use money orders, focus on minimizing how many you buy and how often you pay purchase fees. Consolidate payments when it’s allowed, such as paying a month ahead if your landlord or biller accepts it, so you don’t pay the same fee repeatedly. Keep every receipt and stub, because paper payments come with “proof” responsibilities if something gets lost or misapplied. Compare purchase locations, since some fees are flat while others can be higher depending on where you buy. And always verify any “pay by QR code” or urgent payment request, because payment scams thrive when people feel pressured and can’t easily confirm what’s legitimate.

Build a Bill-Pay Setup That Doesn’t Punish You

The real solution is building a bill-paying system that fits your reality without charging you extra for being offline. You don’t need to go fully digital overnight, but you do want at least one low-fee, trackable option you can use consistently. When a new rule adds 1% in certain situations, your best defense is knowing which transactions trigger it and routing around them. If you take one action this week, call your billers and ask, “What’s the cheapest way to pay that still gives me a receipt?” That one question can save you more than the headline fee ever will.

Have you noticed new fees when paying bills lately, and what method has been the most reliable (and cheapest) for you?

What to Read Next…

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