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
EXCLUSIVE: The Oversight Project calls for investigation into Fusus, Oak Brook contract
Will County Executive Committee Recommends 600 MW Pride of the Prairie Solar Project in 6-5 Split Vote
Europe tried wealth taxes. Most gave up.
Aging Systems and Judicial Mandates Drive Significant FY2027 Budget Requests for Will County Courts and Sheriff
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Planning and Zoning Commission for May 5, 2026
Colorado governor shortens Tina Peters’ sentence for election tampering
No ruling; Florida judge hears arguments in redistricting litigation
Debate grows over bill on gender, abortion care access in child placement
Lawsuit: D300 secretly gender transitioned student; Seeks to nix IL gender ‘guidance,’ too
WATCH: Family farm’s decade-long water war with Ecology waiting on WA Supreme Court
Trump says tariffs never came up during China trip
Illinois Quick Hits: Report shows 8% of Cook County offenders on electronic monitoring AWOL