Concept Guide

Payment Processing

Every card swipe triggers a cascade of fees, approvals, and settlement steps involving up to seven different entities. Most operators only see the final rate on their statement — and don't know which parts are negotiable. This page explains the mechanics clearly.

Definition: Payment processing is the set of systems and intermediaries that authorize, clear, and settle a payment made with a credit or debit card. The process involves the cardholder, merchant, acquiring bank, card network (Visa/Mastercard), and issuing bank — each taking a cut through a layered fee structure.
2–3.5%
typical all-in rate for card payments in the US
~1.8%
average interchange fee on a consumer Visa credit card
1–3 days
time to settlement for most card transactions
0.6%
typical processor markup range (the negotiable part)

On This Page

  1. How a Card Payment Works
  2. The Fee Layers
  3. What Is Interchange
  4. Processor Markup — the Negotiable Part
  5. Chargebacks Explained
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

How a Card Payment Works

When a customer taps their card at your terminal, a transaction flows through multiple systems in under two seconds:

The Fee Layers

Your processing statement shows one blended rate, but it's actually three stacked fees:

What Is Interchange

Interchange is the largest component of card processing fees — typically 60–70% of your total rate. It's paid to the bank that issued the customer's card.

Interchange rates vary by: card type (credit vs debit), rewards level (basic vs premium rewards cards), business category (MCC code), and transaction type (card-present vs card-not-present).

A basic debit card might have an interchange rate of 0.8%. A premium travel rewards credit card might be 2.4%. You have no control over which card customers present — but you can optimize which transaction types you accept and how.

Processor Markup — the Negotiable Part

The processor markup is what your payment processor (Square, Stripe, Clover, Heartland, First Data, etc.) charges on top of interchange and assessments.

On a flat-rate model (Stripe at 2.9% + $0.30), the markup is baked into a single rate. On an interchange-plus model, the markup is listed separately (e.g., 'interchange + 0.25% + $0.10').

Interchange-plus pricing is almost always better for established businesses processing over $10,000/month. If you're on a flat rate and processing over $15k/month, you're likely overpaying.

Processor markups are negotiable at volume. Over $50k/month, most processors will negotiate. Before negotiating, you need to know your current effective rate — divide total processing fees by total volume processed.

Chargebacks Explained

A chargeback occurs when a cardholder disputes a charge with their bank instead of requesting a refund from the merchant directly. The issuing bank can forcibly reverse the transaction.

From the merchant's perspective: funds are debited immediately upon dispute, a chargeback fee is assessed ($15–$100), and you have a limited window to respond with evidence.

Chargeback prevention is about documentation and process: signed authorizations, clear refund policies, delivery confirmation, and prompt customer service responses reduce dispute rates significantly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a payment processor and a payment gateway?

A gateway is the software that securely captures and transmits card data. A processor is the entity that routes and settles transactions. Many companies (Stripe, Square) combine both functions. Some setups use a separate gateway (Authorize.net) with a backend processor (TSYS, First Data).

How do I find my actual effective rate?

Divide your total processing fees (from your statement) by your total dollar volume processed. That's your effective rate. Compare it to interchange-plus benchmarks for your business type. If you're over 2.5% on mostly card-present transactions, you're likely overpaying.

Can I pass card fees to customers?

In most US states, yes — surcharging is legal but regulated. You must disclose the surcharge clearly at point of sale. Rules vary by state and card network. Debit cards cannot be surcharged under Visa/Mastercard rules. Cash discount programs are a common alternative.

What's the safest way to handle payment disputes?

Document everything. For card-not-present: get signed authorization, save IP + device data, confirm delivery. Respond to every dispute within the window with organized evidence. Use a processor that provides chargeback alerts (Ethoca, Verifi) so you can resolve disputes before they escalate.

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Updated: 2026-03-05 • Bucket: concepts

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