Will County Treasurer Confirms Free Online Tax Payment Option, Warns Against High Credit Card Fees
Will County Treasurer Tim Brophy confirmed Tuesday that property owners have a free online payment option available and advised residents to avoid the high convenience fees associated with using credit cards for tax payments.
Appearing before the Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee, Brophy and his colleague Julie Shetina addressed a concern raised by a board member about the significant cost of paying a large tax bill with a credit card. Brophy explained that while the county’s third-party payment processor charges a 2.28% fee for both credit and debit card transactions, a free option is widely used.
“There is a free way,” Brophy said, noting that about 50,000 taxpayers use the service each payment period. The free method involves an electronic check (e-check) or Automatic Clearing House (ACH) transfer, where taxpayers enter their bank routing and account numbers to authorize a direct payment from their bank account.
The 2.28% fee on a $30,000 tax bill, for example, would cost a taxpayer nearly $700. Brophy emphasized that this fee is charged by and paid to the payment processing company, not the county.
The discussion also touched on why consumer-facing payment apps like Zelle or Venmo are not suitable for tax collection. Brophy explained these services have low transaction limits, typically around $2,500, and do not collect the detailed information—such as name, address, email, and phone number—that the Treasurer’s office needs to track payments and resolve the 2% of cases that involve errors like double payments or non-payments.
Shetina added that the county negotiates the credit card rate and that the current vendor offered the ACH service for free to win the county’s business.
Latest News Stories
Calif. climate change lawsuits paused during SCOTUS review
U.S. will strike Iran infrastructure with no deal, Hegseth warns
New North Carolina law, question on facts pivotal to Mosley appeal
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Legislative Committee for April 7, 2026
Illinois lawmakers grill diversity commission over lack of progress
U.S. House vote on spy powers extension delayed due to bipartisan pushback
Auditors praise Trump anti-fraud healthcare proposal
WATCH: Gun owners rally at Illinois Statehouse against more gun regulations
GOP seeks probe of $180B in fraud with taxpayers’ money
Bill advances to prevent local governments from clearing homeless camps
Bonta’s anti-Exxon emails may have run afoul of CA corruption law: Claim
Expulsion votes for two members of Congress could happen next week, Luna says