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Merchant Services Explained for Business Owners

Payment processing is the backbone of every business that accepts credit cards. Understanding how fees are calculated, how risk is measured, and what causes account shutdowns gives you the power to protect your revenue and lower your costs.

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1. What Merchant Services Actually Are

Merchant services refer to the systems, technology, and financial relationships that allow a business to accept electronic payments. Every card transaction involves multiple parties working together in real time.

The payment processor handles the technical routing of transaction data between your point-of-sale terminal and the card networks. The acquiring bank (also called the merchant bank) underwrites your account and assumes the financial risk of your transactions. The card networks (Visa, Mastercard, Discover, American Express) set interchange rates and enforce compliance standards.

When a customer swipes, dips, or taps their card, the processor sends the transaction to the card network, which routes it to the issuing bank for approval. The entire authorization process takes approximately two seconds.

Understanding this chain matters because each participant takes a fee, and each one monitors your account for risk indicators that could trigger a review or shutdown.

2. How Credit Card Processing Works

Credit card processing follows a structured sequence that happens with every transaction your business runs.

Authorization

When a card is presented, your terminal sends the transaction details to the processor, which forwards them through the card network to the issuing bank. The bank checks available funds, fraud filters, and account status before returning an approval or decline code.

Batching

Throughout the day, approved transactions accumulate in a batch. Most merchants close their batch once per day, typically at the end of business. Batching initiates the settlement process.

Settlement and Funding

After the batch closes, the processor submits all transactions for settlement. The card networks coordinate fund transfers between the issuing banks and your acquiring bank. Funds typically arrive in your business account within one to three business days, depending on your processor and account type.

Delays in funding can signal account holds or risk reviews. If your settlement timeline changes unexpectedly, it may indicate that your processor has flagged your account for manual review.

3. Understanding Processing Fees

Every card transaction incurs fees that are split among the processor, the card network, and the issuing bank. These fees are typically expressed as a percentage of the transaction amount plus a flat per-transaction charge.

The three main fee categories are interchange fees (paid to the issuing bank), assessment fees (paid to the card network), and processor markup (your processor's profit margin). Most merchants pay an effective rate between 2.5% and 3.5%, but this varies widely based on business type, card types accepted, and pricing model.

Common pricing models include tiered pricing, interchange-plus, and flat-rate pricing. Interchange-plus is generally the most transparent because it separates the wholesale interchange cost from the processor markup.

Deep Dive: Processing Fees

Learn exactly how processing fees are structured and where your money goes.

Read the Processing Fees Guide

4. Interchange and Processor Markups

Interchange is the largest component of your processing cost. These rates are set by the card networks (Visa and Mastercard publish their interchange tables twice per year) and vary based on card type, transaction method, and merchant category code (MCC).

Rewards cards, corporate cards, and card-not-present transactions carry higher interchange rates than standard debit cards swiped in person. Your MCC classification also affects your interchange category, and an incorrect MCC can result in higher fees on every transaction.

On top of interchange, your processor adds a markup. This markup is where processors make their profit, and it varies significantly between providers. Some processors bundle interchange and markup into a single tiered rate, making it difficult to see the actual cost breakdown.

Interchange Explained

Understand the difference between interchange, assessments, and processor markups.

Read Interchange Fees Explained

5. Chargebacks and Risk Monitoring

A chargeback occurs when a cardholder disputes a transaction and the issuing bank reverses the payment. Every chargeback costs your business the transaction amount, a chargeback fee (typically $15 to $100), and reputational damage with your processor.

Processors and card networks track your chargeback ratio, which is the number of chargebacks divided by total transactions in a given month. Visa and Mastercard both enforce monitoring programs that trigger when your ratio exceeds certain thresholds.

Once enrolled in a monitoring program, you face increased fees, mandatory action plans, and potential account termination if the ratio is not reduced within the prescribed timeframe.

Warning Signs to Watch

Know the early indicators that your merchant account may be at risk.

Read Shutdown Warning Signs

6. Merchant Account Shutdowns

A merchant account shutdown happens when your processor or acquiring bank terminates your ability to process card payments. This can occur with little or no warning, and the consequences can be severe for any business that depends on card revenue.

Common shutdown triggers include:

When an account is terminated for risk reasons, the merchant may be placed on the MATCH list (Member Alert to Control High-Risk Merchants), which makes it extremely difficult to obtain processing from any other provider for up to five years.

Proactive monitoring and a merchant continuity plan can prevent most shutdowns before they happen.

Protect Your Processing Ability

Learn the framework for maintaining continuous payment processing.

Read the Merchant Continuity Guide

7. How Businesses Reduce Processing Costs

Reducing your effective processing rate does not require switching processors (though that is sometimes the right move). Several strategies can lower your costs with your existing setup.

Lower Your Processing Costs

Discover proven strategies for reducing credit card processing fees.

Read the Cost Reduction Guide

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