Credit Card Processing Basics

Credit Card Processing Basics

Components of Credit Card Processing Cost

To understand pass through pricing you need a general idea of the components of credit card processing cost which are interchange fees, assessments and a processor markup. These three components are part of every credit card transaction.

Interchange Fees

Interchange fees are paid by your processor's bank to the issuing bank of your customers' credit card. They're set by the members of Visa and MasterCard (the banks), and they're the same for all businesses. Think of interchange fees as wholesale processing rates: they're the lowest attainable rates and fee.

There are a couple hundred interchange fees between Visa and MasterCard, but it's not necessary to familiarize yourself with all of them since many won't apply to your business. However, it doesn't hurt to take a look at the Visa and MasterCard fee schedules posted online to get an idea of what they look like. Here's a snippet from Visa's interchange table.


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(Discover and Amex don't publicly post their fee schedules.)

Assessments

Many people are surprised to learn that Visa, MasterCard, and Discover don't make a dime from interchange fee revenue. Instead, they make money by charging you assessments when you accept a credit or debit card branded with their logo.

Together, interchange and assessments make up the entire "wholesale" cost of credit card processing. As with anything, you want to pay as close to wholesale as possible, meaning you want to pay a small markup. In the case of credit card processing, the card processor is the one that sets the markup.

Processor's Markup

The processing markup is any rate or fee beyond the base costs of interchange and assessments, and it's the only area of cost that varies from one processor to the next. The discount rate and transaction fee portion of a processor's markup is collectively the largest contributor to overall markup expense. But it's not the rate that's most important, it's the pricing model on which the rate is based.

Here's where interchange pass through pricing comes in. With pass through pricing, a processor's rate and transaction fee are separate from interchange and assessments. This allows them to be consistent regardless of the actual cost of a transaction.

With other types of pricing, such as tiered, the processor's "rate" includes interchange and assessments all bundled together, which has the effect of essentially concealing actual costs and resulting in hidden fees. You may already be familiar with qualified, mid-qualified and non-qualified rates for which tiered pricing is infamous.

Bringing it All Together

Let's examine things a little further now that you know the components of processing cost, and you have some background on the different pricing models and benefits of pass through.

Interchange and assessments are the same for all businesses and all processors, and their sum represents the lowest possible credit card processing fee for any given transaction. Let's take a look at an example to illustrate what I mean.

Let's pretend that you swipe a Visa reward credit card. The interchange fee for this transaction is 1.65% plus a $0.10 transaction fee, and Visa's assessment is 0.11% plus a $0.0225 transaction fee for a total of 1.76% plus $0.1225. Since interchange and assessments are the same for all businesses and all processors, any business that swipes a Visa reward credit card will have to pay the same rate and fee of 1.76% plus $0.1225.

There are different interchange rates for different types of businesses, such as small ticket establishments, but let's keep it simple for the sake of this example.

Now let's pretend that two different businesses swipe a Visa reward credit card, but Business A has a merchant account with pass through pricing of .20% and $0.10, and Business B has tiered pricing of 1.69% qualified, 2.25% mid-qualified and 2.99% non-qualified, each with a $0.25 transaction fee.

We know that the actual cost of the transaction is the sum of interchange and assessments, which equals 1.76% plus a $0.1225 transaction fee.

To figure the final rate for Business A all we need to do is add the processor's pass through markup of .20% plus $0.10 to the actual cost of the transaction for a final rate of 1.96% plus a $0.2225 transaction fee.

Figuring the final rate for Business B requires us to subtract the actual cost of the transaction from the processor's bundled rate, but it's not that easy. Since we're dealing with a reward card the processor probably sent the transaction to the mid-qualified rate tier. So, let's subtract the actual cost of 1.76% plus $0.1225 from the processor's rate of 2.25% plus $0.25. This leaves us with a markup of 0.49% plus $0.1275.

As you can see there's a lot of guess work with tiered pricing in trying to figure out which tier to use when calculating a processor's markup. Perhaps more importantly than the guesswork is the fact that tiered pricing results in a greater markup and overall processing expense.

It's also important to note that with bundled pricing, a processor can change which transactions are charged according to which "rate" at any time. Just because a transaction with one type of card is considered "qualified" once doesn't mean that the processor won't charge the more expensive "non-qualified" rate for the same type of card in the future. With pass-through pricing, you won't have to worry about that. The processor's markup will remain the same no matter what, making it easier to see what you're paying and to find the lowest cost option.

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