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Apple Pay Gas Station Support Rolling Out Next Year

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You’ll soon be able to pay for gas right at the pump using Apple Pay early next year, as Chevron is said to be rolling out Apple’s payment platform at its gas pumps beginning in early 2015.

Apple Pay has been available for use inside of Chevron stores since the payment platform first launched back in October, but now the company will be expanding that functionality directly to the gas pumps, which will allow drivers to pay for their gas instantly using their iPhone 6 or iPhone 6 Plus.

Apple Pay launched back in October alongside the iOS 8.1 update for iPhone and iPad users. The new payment platform already has a handful of major banks that support it, as well as a growing list of retail stores, with new banks and retail locations added to the list constantly.

A handful of new banks have rolled out support for Apple Pay recently, including Associated Bank, BB&T, Black Hills FCU, Commerce Bank, Dupaco Community Credit Union, Idaho Central Credit Union, First Tennessee Bank, TD Bank North America, WesBanco, and UW Credit Union.

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This comes shortly after another wave of banks began supporting Apple’s new digital wallet platform, including USAA, US Bank, Navy Federal Credit Union, Barclaycard, PNC, L&N Federal Credit Union, UW Credit Union, and M&T Bank.

Only a handful of major banks supported Apple Pay when it initially launched, including Bank of America, Capital One, Chase, Citi and Wells Fargo.

Apple Pay is essentially the company’s own digital wallet platform to take on the growing market of digital payment systems that already released by companies like Google.

Apple Pay allows you to store your credit card information on your iPhone and use it to buy stuff at any store that supports Apple Pay. The iPhone 6 has an NFC chip that allows you to tap the pay terminal at a store to instantly buy goods. Furthermore, doing this doesn’t give the store your credit card information, so you’re less susceptible to store hacks that steal credit card information, similar to the recent Home Depot and Target hacks.

Apple Pay also works with mobile shopping apps, allowing you to pay with a single touch of the Touch ID fingerprint sensor in shopping apps that support the feature.

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Furthermore, Apple says that 220,000 store locations accept Apple Pay as a payment method, and that number will no doubt continue to grow into 2015 and beyond.

The company lists a handful of national chains that support Apple Pay, including McDonald’s, Panera Bread, Staples, Walgreens, Subway, Whole Foods, Macy’s, Bloomingdales, and the Disney Store.

As for apps that accept one-touch payment with Apple Pay, there are plenty that are already on board with it. Some notable shopping apps include Groupon, Panera Bread, OpenTable, Starbucks, Sephora, Target, and even Uber.

Of course, the new payment platform hasn’t launched without its issues. Many users reported being charged twice for one transaction, while other people claimed that they had trouble getting Apple Pay to work in the first place.

We reckon Apple, banks, and stores will work together to fix these issues, but for now it seems early adopters aren’t having a fantastic time with it, and it doesn’t seem to be working 100% of the time. Hopefully these issues will get banged out sooner rather than later.

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