After a year of COVID-19, data from Square show cashless business share more than doubles

March 29, 2021

Square Inc. has released a report highlighting the impact of COVID-19 on global commerce and payments behavior. One year after the onset of the pandemic, the steady increase in cashless adoption rates and online and contactless payments demonstrates a renewed preference toward digitization among business owners and consumers, according to a press release.

From pre-pandemic 2020 to today, we’ve seen the share of cashless businesses more than double in the U.S., Australia, Canada, and the UK, and nearly double in Japan.

Square defines cashless businesses as those that are accepting 95% or more of payments via cashless methods (in-person debit, credit or contactless payments; Square Online payments; or card-not-present payments).

In February 2020 in the U.S. alone, just 6.3% of Square sellers were cashless businesses, which jumped to 14% by February 2021. During that same period, the share of cash transactions decreased from 37.4% in February 2020 to 30.5% in February 2021.

Following U.S. businesses that have been with Square since 2015, we saw a slightly more substantial dip in cash usage during 2020, which indicates the shift away from cash this past year would have taken nearly three years without the pandemic.

Square Economist Felipe Chacon explained, “A year ago, there was no telling whether the sudden spike in cashless businesses and digital payment options was going to last. But today, we can look to markets where the pandemic has largely been eradicated, such as Australia, and see that the increase is sticking with business owners and consumers beyond the pandemic.”

From February 2020 through February 2021, both online and contactless payment options became increasingly popular among business owners and consumers alike:

  • 45% of U.S. Square sellers were accepting online payments by the end of February 2021, up from 30% a year ago.
  • 74% of U.S. Square sellers were accepting contactless payments by the end of February 2021, up from 64% a year ago.

Contactless is defined as payments made in person with a contactless reader using a credit/debit card or mobile device.

Despite the widespread growth in digital payment methods this past year, survey results from Wakefield Research serve as a reminder that a less-cash society is not necessarily indicative of a cashless one:

  • 73% of American consumers and 68% of small business owners say the U.S. will never become a completely cashless society.
  • However, among U.S. small business owners who disagree, 22% think the U.S. will become completely cashless in 10 years or fewer, up from just 13% in 2019.

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