Home

pinbetaling

Pinbetaling, or PIN payment, is a method of electronic payment in which the cardholder uses a Personal Identification Number (PIN) to authorize a transaction at a point-of-sale (POS) terminal. It is commonly associated with debit cards but is also used with some credit cards and prepaid cards that support chip-and-PIN (EMV) verification.

How it works: The card is presented by the customer and the terminal reads the card’s chip.

Protection and risks: PINs should be kept secret and never written on the card. Shield the keypad

Regional use and variations: Pinbetaling is widely used in Europe and parts of Asia and remains a

Related terms: chip-and-PIN, EMV, PIN verification, offline PIN, online PIN.

The
customer
enters
the
PIN
on
a
keypad,
and
the
PIN
is
verified
either
by
the
card
itself
(offline
verification)
or
by
the
issuing
bank
(online
verification).
If
the
PIN
matches,
the
transaction
is
approved;
otherwise
it
is
declined.
PIN-based
transactions
are
designed
to
prevent
unauthorized
use
even
if
the
card
is
stolen.
from
onlookers,
and
be
wary
of
skimming
or
malware
in
card
readers.
Security
often
relies
on
chip
technology
(EMV)
and
encrypted
PIN
transmission.
Risks
include
card
loss,
shoulder
surfing,
or
compromised
merchant
systems,
though
fraud
protection
and
monitoring
by
card
issuers
mitigate
these
threats.
dominant
method
for
many
debit
card
transactions.
Some
regions
also
support
contactless
payments
where
PIN
entry
may
be
required
for
higher
amounts
or
after
a
certain
number
of
transactions.
In
other
markets,
alternative
verifications
such
as
signatures
or
online
authorization
are
still
used
for
certain
cards
or
payment
types.