Accepting credit cards

Accepting Credit Cards: How Much Does It Cost?

Understanding the fees associated with accepting credit cards can seem confusing and overwhelming. However, the facts are pretty straightforward once you break them down. As a nationally recognized industry leader in credit card processing, International Bancard wants to help you learn about credit card processing fees. Not all credit card processing fees are negotiable, which is why it is important to understand what each fee is and how they work.

There are a few parties involved in between the cardholder and the merchant when it comes to the cost of accepting credit cards. These include:

  • Issuing banks: The banks that issue credit cards to consumers and businesses
  • The card associations: These are the companies that make credit cards, comprised of Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover
  • Payment processors: These are institutions, like International Bancard, that act as the intermediary between merchants and the credit card associations

Now that you know each of the parties involved, it’s time to look at the fees you will be expected to pay. Every time you accept a credit card, you are incurring three costs: Interchange, Assessments and Processing Fees.

Interchange: Interchange fees are assessed by the issuing banks, while the Card Associations determine the Interchange fees that are paid to the banks. Interchange rates are primarily based on industry, card type and transaction type. These fees are published rates and can be found on the Card Association websites. No payment processor can give you a lower rate or better deal on this fee. This is the same fee regardless of your payment processor.

Assessments: Assessments are fees paid to the Card Associations. Like Interchange fees, Assessment fees are the same for all payment processors. International Bancard has simplified these fees and assessments for your benefit, which can be found here.

Processing Fees: Processing fees are what the payment processor charges the merchant in order to perform the authorization, settlement and reporting of transactions. Additional processor services include merchant account underwriting, client care, technical support and risk monitoring.


Also on StartupNation.com: Why Your Business Should Accept EMV Chip Cards


Remember, as a small business, you do not have control over Interchange. Those are fees determined by Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express. However, you do have control over the processing fees that your merchant provider charges you. For example: you have control over the authorization/transaction fees, annual fee, regulatory fee and data breach fee, all of which are shown by our sample statement below:

International Bancard

As a merchant, you will receive a monthly merchant statement. This statement, as shown above, helps you to reconcile your fees each month. This sample is based on accepting six transactions in one month: two Visa cards, two MasterCards, one Discover and one American Express. This will help you understand where the fees are shown and what they mean. The fee types are color coordinated:

  • Red are fees from International Bancard, i.e. the “processing fees”
  • Green are the Interchange fees from the issuing banks
  • Grey are the assessment fees from the Card Associations

In this sample statement, your business accepted six transactions for a total of $3,850 in revenue. Thus, the total fees amounted to $80.30. (The Effective rate, total fees divided by total sales volume, is 2.09 percent in this scenario).

Credit card fees are not easy to understand, nor are they easy to reconcile because the type of payment cards that your cardholders present impact the cost of acceptance. It is extremely important to partner with a merchant services provider that you trust, so rest assured there are no hidden fees.

Content provided by International Bancard

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply
Related Posts
Group of people having a meeting in sleek offices.
Read More

5 Costs You Can Cut Without Killing Your Startup

When you're building your dream startup, cutting costs can seem like a step back. But that's not true.  As you grow and expand, keeping costs in check becomes crucial for your long-term success. It's like...