International franchise In a transaction completed on July 1, 2008,
Discover Financial Services purchased Diners Club International from Citibank for $165 million. The deal was announced in April 2008 and approved by the U.S. government in May 2008. By merging the North American Discover Network with the international Diners Club Network, Discover created a global payment processing system.
Discover Bank has no plans to issue Diners Club-branded cards, which continue to be issued by Diners Club International licensees. In 2011, Discover started incorporating its logo on Diners Club International cards. Several payment processors, like
PayPal, can process only new Diners Club International cards, which include the Discover logo,
Australia In July 1974,
Ansett Transport Industries purchased a 50% shareholding in the Australian franchise. In January 1999, Ansett sold its shareholding to
Citigroup. On June 1, 2022,
National Australia Bank bought Citigroup's Consumer Banking business in Australia, including the Australian branch of Diners Club. The Diners Club Corporate Card, Citi Mastercard Corporate Executive Companion Card, Diners Club Business Card and the Citi Mastercard Business Companion Card previously marketed under the Citibank brand were brought under the
National Australia Bank (NAB) brand as a result of the acquisition. On November 1, 2023, Diners Club Australia announced that it was ending personal cards on January 31, 2024, with no transactions possible after that date. Subsequently, it announced that all business and corporate cards were ending on April 15, 2024. All Diners Club accounts closed on September 16, 2024, effectively ending Diners Club's presence in the Australian market.
Brazil On November 21, 2018, it was announced that Diners Club International and Brazilian card association
Elo were extending their partnership: they launched Elo Diners Club International Cards in Brazil. The cards run via the Discover Global Network, and are accepted at 42 million merchant locations and 2 million ATMs in over 190 countries and territories.
China and Hong Kong Diners Club credit card issued in 2022. ICBC is the sole issuing institution of all Diners Club cards in mainland China. In September 2017, Diners Club International signed a deal with Allinpay, a Chinese payment provider, to be the exclusive carrier of all the cards that are part of the Discover Global Network. Apart from that, Allinpay intended to increase the card acceptance in Hong Kong, especially by "travel oriented merchants".
Chile In Chile, the Diners Club franchise was long held by Citibank Chile until it was acquired by
Banco de Chile in 2008, who then took over said franchise.
Colombia In Colombia, the first Diners Club franchise was opened in 1963. Nowadays, the Colombian franchisee and issuer of Diners Club cards is
Banco Davivienda.
Europe Diners Club has franchises in some European countries, such as Austria, Germany, North Macedonia, Slovenia, Spain, and Switzerland for example. Those franchises generally only issue Diners Club cards to residents of their respective countries. However, since January 2025, ISX Financial has become a pan-European Diners Club franchisee, issuing the Flykk Diners Club debit card in several European markets.
India Diners Club was the first to introduce credit cards in India.
Kali Mody is credited with opening the first Diners franchise in the country in 1961, which started an invitation-only credit card issuance. Its cards have been offered by
Citibank India, followed by
HDFC Bank which took over in 2011. In 2021, the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) barred the company (along with
American Express) from issuing new cards for failing to follow norms about storing data within the country. The ban was lifted later in the year after it complied with the RBI guidelines.
Japan capability issued in 2016 The Nihon Kōtsū Kōsha (now
JTB Corporation) and
Fuji Bank (the direct predecessor of
Mizuho Corporate Bank) founded Diners Club Japan in 1960, and began issuing the country's first Diners Club cards in spring 1961, shortly before
JCB. In 2000, Diners Club Japan was acquired by
Citibank Japan, and since 2015, the sole issuer of all Diners Club cards in Japan is
Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank, after it acquired Citibank Japan's credit card division that same year.
Kazakhstan In September 2016,
Kazkommertsbank became the official Diners Club card issuer in Kazakhstan. In a statement, managing director of Kazkommertsbank, Nurlan Zhagiparov said, "Our collaboration with Diners Club is another step toward the integration of Kazakhstan into the global economy, which increases the tourism potential in our country."
Korea, South In Korea, Diners Club started its business around the 1980s. However, in 1993,
Citibank Korea sold Diners Club Korea to Daewoo Group, and after the acquisition by
Daewoo Group, the parent company of
Daewoo Motors, Diners Club Korea ran a successful business with sales of over 400 billion won. Diners Club Korea went through strict card issuance screening and solidified its position as a premium credit card in Korea. The number of Diners Club member stores increased more than tenfold, and the number of members reached hundreds of thousands, and the business was successful. However, Daewoo Group, which had acquired Diners Club, sold Diners Club Korea to
Hyundai Motor Company after experiencing financial difficulties and starting a workout. Later, Diners Club Korea's name was changed to
Hyundai Card, and
Hyundai Motor Company began issuing
Visa and
MasterCard credit cards other than Diners Club to start a credit card business in earnest. Hyundai Card continued to maintain the exclusive license of Diners Club, but stopped issuing the card and discontinued the license contract with Diners Club because there was no benefit compared to the license fee. As a result,
Hyundai Card was able to issue
American Express cards and signed an exclusive license for American Express Card individual cards in Korea. Since then, Diners Club has signed a license contract with Korean credit card companies
BC Card and
Woori Card to issue Diners Club cards in Korea. In addition, Diners Club, which previously used Hyundai Card's payment network, began using BC Card's payment network in 2018. BC Card is a credit card company established by various Korean banks such as
Citibank Korea and
Woori Bank. Because it has contracts with almost all stores in Korea, Diners Club cards can be used at almost all stores and restaurants in Korea.
Nordic franchise In the
Nordic countries, the long-time franchisee was SEB Kort AB, a subsidiary of the Swedish bank
Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken. SEB Kort closed the service on May 31, 2019, citing increased competition and regulatory pressure in the Nordic payment card market, and the card is no longer issued in the Nordic countries.
North American franchise MasterCard alliance In 2004, Diners Club announced an agreement with
Mastercard. Since 2004, all Diners Club cards issued in the United States and Canada (by Citibank until 2009, by BMO since) feature a Mastercard logo and 16-digit account number on the front and can be used wherever Mastercard is accepted. They are processed through the Mastercard network. As of October 2023, BMO is not accepting new applications for Diners Club cards, as improvements are being made to the application process, while existing card members continue to be served. Initially, cards from other countries continued to bear a 14-digit account number on the front, with the Mastercard logo on the back. However, since the takeover of Diners Club International by Discover Financial Services, international cards have had the Discover logo on the back and the Diners Club International network is part of the Discover network. Since then, the only connection between Diners Club in North America and Diners Club International is BMO's continuous licensed use of the Diners Club brands, including Carte Blanche, on Mastercard credit cards.
Carte Blanche Carte Blanche began in 1958 when the
Hilton Hotels travel & entertainment card was renamed. Hilton sold Carte Blanche to
First National City Bank in 1966. Regulatory challenges forced First National City Bank to sell Carte Blanche to
Avco in 1968. In 1978, Citicorp (parent company of First National City Bank which was renamed Citibank) reacquired Carte Blanche without regulatory opposition. The 1960s- and 1970s-era Carte Blanche cards were considered more prestigious worldwide than their competition, the
American Express and Diners Club cards, though its small cardmember base hindered its success. In 1981, Citicorp acquired the Diners Club card, and by the mid-1990s the Carte Blanche card was being phased out in favor of Diners Club. Parent company
Citigroup was formed in 1998 with the merger of Citicorp and the Travelers Group. Citigroup issued a premium Diners Club card in 2000, naming it the Diners Club Carte Blanche card. It was an upper-level charge card on par with the American Express
Platinum Card. The Carte Blanche card in North America, now a branded Mastercard issued by BMO under its Diners Club International brand license, carried a US$300 annual fee as of April 2015 and offers an extensive menu of perks.
enRoute Diners Club expanded its customer base in
Canada by acquiring the
enRoute credit card from
Air Canada in 1992. It marketed the card under the combined name for a period of time as the "Diners Club/enRoute Card". The enRoute business was valued at over $300 million at the time of acquisition.
Acquisition by BMO In November 2009,
Citibank announced that Diners Club International's North American franchise had been sold to
Bank of Montreal (BMO). The deal gives BMO exclusive rights to issue Diners cards in the U.S. and Canada. At the time, BMO said the Diners Club fits well with its existing commercial card business, adding that, commercial cards are one of the fastest-growing segments in the credit card business. The Warehouse Group subsequently closed Diners Club NZ in 2018.
Russia In December 2010,
Russian Standard Bank and Diners Club International entered into an agreement for settlement of transactions in Russia. Under the agreement, Russian Standard Bank would process settlement transactions of other banks acting as acquirers of Discover Financial Services and Diners Club International in Russia. On March 8, 2022, Discover Financial Services and Diners Club International suspended all operations in Russia due to the
Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Slovenian franchise In 2013, Tomaž Lovše, who owned Diners Club Slovenia, was one of three people investigated in Slovenia regarding unpaid debts that his franchise owed to merchants. In May, the
Central Bank of Slovenia revoked Diners Club Slovenia's license for payment services, which meant 80,000 local members could not use their card. Diners Club International transferred the franchise to a subsidiary of Austria's
Erste Bank group, Erste Card Club, and agreed to repay the franchise's debt to merchants. An Erste press release in August 2013 stated that Diners Club services were once again available in Slovenia.
Southeast Asia Malaysia and Singapore Diners Club launched its Malaysian and Singaporean franchises in 1960. Its Malaysian franchise was terminated in 2015. In December 2016, Diners Club International and
2C2P announced in a statement that the latter is a global provider of cards running on Discover Global Network and that it will increase the number of merchants who use the card in the region of South East Asia. In 2023, the Diners Club Singaporean franchise renamed itself to
DCS Card Centre and broadened its business to become a "fintech with heritage", as it aimed to become more than just an issuer of Diners Club cards in Singapore. In tandem with the rebranding, issued its first non-Diners Club credit cards, DCS Ultimate Platinum UnionPay Card, and its
Mastercard counterpart of the same name. This effectively made it one of the only two Diners Club franchise companies to issue third-party payment network cards, the latter being Diners Club Ecuador.
Philippines On 8 October 1980, Diners Club entered into an exclusive franchise with
Security Bank as exclusive franchisee of Diners Club in the Philippines through Security Diners International Corporation. In 2003, Security Diners International Corporation was renamed into SB Cards Corporation, as the bank diversified its product offering and entered into an agreement to carry Mastercard, alongside its Diners Club cards. Security Bank renewed its network participation agreement with Diners Club on 9 October 2013 which aimed to provide world class benefits of Diners Club in the Philippines through SBC. Turn of events suddenly changed the course of history in June 2016,
Security Bank through its credit card division SB Cards Corporation sold Diners Club's exclusive rights in the Philippines to competitor and Philippines' leading banking conglomerate,
BDO Unibank and in October of the same year, Diners Club International announced that they signed a deal with BDO Unibank to become the exclusive provider of the Diners Club in the Philippines. Security Bank at the time offered three tier cards: Blue (Classic), Platinum (named International), and Black (named Premiere). At present, BDO offers Platinum (International), and Black (Premiere) cards.
Spain was founded in 1954 as the first credit card issuer in the country. In 2008,
Banco Santander acquired 75% and
AirPlus International the remaining 25% of Diners Club Spain. Banco Santander subsequently acquired AirPlus International's remaining stake in 2021.
Swiss, Austrian and German franchise In a transaction that closed on August 6, 2010, Citibank sold the Swiss and German franchises to a private investment group headed by Anthony J. Helbling. The Austrian and German Diners Club cards are issued by the Austrian DC Bank AG, while the Swiss Diners Club cards are issued by Cornèr Banca SA.
Turkey Diners Club was brought to Turkey by
Koç Holding for the first time in 1968 and been issued for a while. After a couple years without being distributed in Turkey, it was brought back to the country in 2016 by
Alternatif Bank and as of September 2023, it is still being distributed by Alternatif Bank. Since 2019, the Diners Club cards in Turkey are being issued co-branded with
TROY within a
card reciprocal agreement, thus the acceptance of Diners Club and Discover cards throughout Turkey has been increased to full coverage. This agreement also provides TROY cards to be accepted on Discover/Diners Club network worldwide.
United Arab Emirates Diners Club UAE, Egypt, Lebanon and Jordan is owned and operated by the
Network International subsidiary of
Emirates NBD Bank.
United Kingdom and Ireland franchise On August 7, 2012, Citigroup announced the sale of its Diners Club franchise in the United Kingdom and Ireland to Affiniture Cards, a private investor group.
Venezuela Mercantil Banco is the sole franchisee of Diners Club in Venezuela since 1968.
Vietnam On January 23, 2018, it was announced that
Vietinbank had entered into a partnership with Diners Club International to be the exclusive issuer of Diners Club cards (both standard and contactless) in Vietnam. == Business development and contracts ==