Crown Connect Version 2025.2.18

Release notes for version 2025.2.18

User Authentication and Management

Today’s release brings a ground-up redesign of Crown’s user authentication and management. This update includes the following enhancements:

  1. One Login: One of our most requested features is here! You can now invite existing users to another practice. To invite an existing user to another practice, create a new user using their existing email. The user will receive an invite to accept the request; once the invite has been accepted, the user can switch between practices without signing out and signing back in with different logins.

  2. My Profile: Manage your account details (name and profile photo), security (change password), and email notifications.

  3. User Admin: Statuses will give you better visibility if a user is invited or active. You can resend or revoke invites for invited users under actions. Once an invited user creates their account, their status will become active. Editing permissions or removing active users is available under actions.

User Authentication Security Enhancements:

  1. Soc 2 Type 2: This ensures the highest standards in security compliance to ensure your data stays even safer.
  2. Bot & Brute force detection: Better emergent security attack vector, in simple terms, greater threat management.
  3. Password leak protection: Enforces best practices by configuring custom password policies and leveraging automatic HaveIBeenPwned leak detection.
  4. Passkey Support: Passkeys are cryptographic keys for secure authentication, replacing traditional passwords with more secure alternatives like biometrics or hardware tokens.

Bug Fixes

  • Fixed an issue where the Void/Refund email receipt was being sent to inactive users.
  • Fixed privacy policy link on patient-facing payment pages.

Having issues?

Since this is a ground-up redesign of our user authentication and management, if you’re having any issues, please contact us.

Oops! We could not locate your form.

Surcharge FAQ

Surcharge Compliance

If you are considering introducing a credit card surcharge for your patients, it is important to understand that there are specific rules and regulations that must be followed when enrolling in and operating under a surcharge plan.

This article provides a general overview of common surcharging requirements. This content is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. It is the responsibility of each merchant to review, understand, and comply with all applicable laws, card-network rules, and regulatory requirements, including notification timeframes, signage requirements, surcharge percentage limits, and jurisdictions where surcharging is prohibited.

If you are unsure about the laws or regulations applicable to your practice, you should consult with qualified legal counsel. Moolah assumes no liability for a merchant’s compliance or non-compliance with credit card surcharging rules or regulations.

Transparent Communication
Card networks, including Visa, Mastercard, Discover, and American Express, require merchants to clearly and transparently disclose when a credit card surcharge is applied.

Practices must clearly notify patients of a credit card surcharge through appropriate signage placed at the practice entrance, at the point of sale or terminal, and anywhere payments are accepted. If payments are accepted online, surcharge disclosures must also be clearly visible on the practice’s website. All disclosures must inform patients that the surcharge applies only to credit card transactions.

Surcharge Limits
Credit card surcharges must comply with both card-network rules and applicable law. The surcharge amount may not exceed the merchant’s actual cost of accepting credit cards and may not exceed 3% of the total transaction amount.

Card-network rules cap credit card surcharges at 3%, meaning that if a merchant’s processing costs exceed this amount, the excess portion cannot be passed on to the patient.


Warning
The following is a general overview of credit card surcharging rules in the United States. Merchants are responsible for understanding and complying with all applicable requirements.

Network and State Restrictions
The major credit card networks, such as Visa and Mastercard, impose specific requirements related to surcharge limits, advance notification, and disclosure.

In addition, several U.S. states and territories regulate or prohibit credit card surcharging. At the time of writing, credit card surcharging is prohibited in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, and Puerto Rico. Other states, including Colorado, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Jersey, and New York, impose restrictions on surcharge amounts or require specific disclosures.

If your practice operates in a state that restricts or prohibits credit card surcharging, you must fully understand and comply with those requirements before implementing a surcharge.

Debit card transactions may never be surcharged, even if the debit card is processed as a credit transaction.

Applicability
Credit card surcharges may be applied only to credit card transactions. Other payment types, including debit cards and alternative payment methods, are not eligible for surcharging.

Regulatory Compliance
Merchants are responsible for maintaining ongoing compliance with all applicable card-network and legal requirements. This includes meeting advance notification obligations, using compliant signage and disclosures, adhering to surcharge percentage limits, and respecting jurisdiction-specific restrictions.

By following these guidelines, dental practices can implement credit card surcharging in a way that aligns with card-network rules and promotes transparency with patients. Clear and upfront communication helps maintain patient trust and supports a positive payment experience.