
The grocery chain said it would start rounding up cash transactions once each store runs out of pennies. The new policy is expected to roll out gradually across Rouses locations in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.
The U.S. Treasury Department says the Mint has made its last order of penny blanks. It will stop making pennies when supplies run out.
Rouses said it will still accept pennies as payment, but once a store’s supply is gone, all cash totals will be rounded up to the nearest nickel — always in the customer’s favor.
Examples:
- If a customer is owed $0.91, they’ll get $0.95 back.
- If they’re owed $0.47, they’ll receive $0.50.
“Our customers are always our top priority,” said Donny Rouse, third-generation CEO of Rouses Markets. “Rounding up is the simplest, fairest way to handle this change so customers never come up short.”
The change will not affect credit, debit, EBT, or mobile payments, Rouses says, only cash transactions involving coin change.
Latest News
- Federal judge orders Trump admin to provide full SNAP payments
- Multiple airlines offering refunds, free changes for impacted flights during shutdown
- California woman behind ‘Marry Lisa’ billboards gets flood of applications
- Illegal deer shooting leads to citations in Ascension Parish
- Senate to vote Friday on pathway to end shutdown
Discover more from RSS Feeds Cloud
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
