Payment Processing Fees Explained: Interchange, Markup, and How to Pay Less in 2026

Payment Processing Fees Explained: Interchange, Markup, and How to Pay Less in 2026 | HL Hunt
Payments & AI

Payment Processing Fees Explained: Interchange, Markup, and How to Pay Less in 2026

Processing fees are one of the largest line items most merchants never fully understand — and that gap is exactly where margin quietly leaks. This guide breaks the fee into its real parts, compares the three pricing models on a level field, and gives you the precise steps to lower your effective cost per transaction without changing a thing about what you sell.

By the HL Hunt Research Desk · 16 min read · Updated June 2026

The anatomy of a processing fee

When a customer pays with a card, the fee you're charged isn't one thing — it's three, stacked together. Understanding the stack is the whole foundation of paying less, because two of the three pieces are fixed costs no processor can change, and only the third is actually negotiable.

  • Interchange — set by the card networks and paid to the bank that issued the customer's card. This is almost always the largest component, and every processor pays the same wholesale rate.
  • Assessments (network fees) — a small, fixed percentage paid to the card network itself (Visa, Mastercard, and so on). Also non-negotiable.
  • Processor markup — what your payment processor charges on top for its service. This is the only piece that varies between providers and the only one you can shop.

Most merchants end up paying an effective rate of roughly 2% to 3.5% per transaction once all three are combined, though the exact figure swings with card type, how the transaction is run, and which pricing model you're on.

Interchange: the biggest piece

Interchange deserves special attention because it's both the largest cost and the most misunderstood. It is not money your processor keeps — it flows through to the card-issuing bank, and it's published by the networks in rate schedules with hundreds of categories. What determines which category a transaction falls into?

  • Card type. Premium rewards and corporate cards carry higher interchange than basic debit, which is part of why your effective rate moves with your customer mix.
  • How it's run. A card physically tapped or inserted ("card-present") usually qualifies for lower interchange than a keyed-in or online ("card-not-present") transaction, which carries more fraud risk.
  • Data quality. Passing complete address and card data — and, for B2B, richer Level 2 and Level 3 data — can qualify a transaction for materially lower interchange categories.

The practical insight: because interchange is wholesale and identical across processors, the honest way to price it is to show it to you directly and add a transparent markup — which is exactly what interchange-plus pricing does.

2% – 3.5%
The typical effective rate merchants pay per transaction once interchange, assessments, and markup are combined — and the range where small structural improvements compound into real money at volume.

The three pricing models compared

ModelHow it worksBest for
Flat-rateOne blended rate for every transactionSimplicity; low-volume or new businesses
TieredTransactions sorted into "qualified/mid/non-qualified" bucketsRarely the best deal; margin often hidden in tiers
Interchange-plusTrue interchange + a fixed, disclosed markupMost established businesses; maximum transparency

Flat-rate is wonderfully simple — one rate, easy to predict — but at meaningful volume that simplicity often costs you, because the blended rate has to be high enough to cover the processor's most expensive transactions. Tiered pricing is the one to be most wary of: it sorts transactions into qualification buckets whose definitions favor the processor, hiding margin where it's hard to audit. Interchange-plus is the transparent standard for most established merchants: you pay the real wholesale interchange, plus a markup you can actually see and compare.

The only number that matters: your effective rate

Advertised rates are nearly useless for comparison because they describe different things. The one figure that lets you compare any two processors honestly is your effective rate: total fees on a statement divided by total sales volume. That single percentage captures everything — interchange, assessments, markup, and any junk fees — in one comparable number. Calculate it from a real statement before you shop, and ask every prospective processor what your effective rate would be on your actual transaction mix, not a headline rate for an ideal one.

How to lower your fees

  1. Find your effective rate. Total fees ÷ total volume. This is your baseline and your comparison tool.
  2. Move to interchange-plus. Trade vague tiers or a high blended rate for the wholesale cost plus a transparent markup.
  3. Improve data quality. Pass complete address and card data, and use Level 2/Level 3 data where eligible, to qualify for lower interchange categories.
  4. Use smart routing and intelligent retries. Lifting approval rates and avoiding unnecessary declines recovers revenue and reduces wasted cost.
  5. Cut fraud and chargebacks. Real-time fraud scoring avoids chargeback fees, fines, and the costlier tiers that disputes trigger — fewer disputes is itself a cost reduction.

These last two levers are where modern, AI-driven processing pulls ahead of legacy providers: it's not only about a lower markup, but about approving more good transactions and preventing the expensive ones. Our deep dive on AI payment processing covers the smart-routing and fraud-scoring mechanics in detail.

Transparent pricing, lower effective cost

HL Hunt Pay pairs transparent pricing with AI-driven smart routing and real-time fraud scoring — so you pay a fair, visible rate, approve more of your good transactions, and prevent the chargebacks that quietly inflate your true cost per sale.

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Hidden fees to watch for

  • Monthly and statement fees — flat charges that inflate your effective rate, especially at lower volume.
  • PCI compliance and "non-compliance" fees — sometimes legitimate, sometimes padding; ask what they cover.
  • Batch and gateway fees — small per-batch or per-transaction add-ons that accumulate.
  • Early termination fees — penalties for leaving a long contract; a red flag worth avoiding.
  • Chargeback and retrieval fees — per-dispute charges that make fraud prevention pay for itself.

None of these are inherently improper, but each belongs in your effective-rate math. A "low rate" wrapped in monthly fees, batch fees, and a termination penalty can easily cost more than a slightly higher rate with none of them.

Stop guessing what you're paying

See a transparent breakdown and put AI-driven routing and fraud scoring to work on your margin. Sign up for HL Hunt Pay and start processing with intelligence built into every transaction — onboarding takes minutes, not days.

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Frequently asked questions

What are the average credit card processing fees?

Most merchants pay an effective rate of roughly 2% to 3.5% per transaction once all components are included — interchange (paid to the issuing bank, usually the largest piece), network assessments (a small fixed percentage), and the processor's markup. The exact rate depends on card type, how the transaction is run, and the pricing model.

What is interchange and who gets it?

Interchange is the largest part of a processing fee. It's set by the card networks and paid to the bank that issued the customer's card — neither the merchant nor the processor keeps it. Because every processor pays the same wholesale interchange, transparent interchange-plus pricing separates it from the processor's own markup.

Which pricing model is cheapest — flat-rate, tiered, or interchange-plus?

For most established businesses with meaningful volume, interchange-plus is the most transparent and usually the most cost-effective. Flat-rate is simple but can cost more at volume, and tiered pricing often hides margin in vague qualification buckets.

How can I lower my payment processing fees?

Find your effective rate, move to interchange-plus, improve transaction data quality to reach lower interchange categories, use smart routing and intelligent retries to lift approvals, and reduce fraud and chargebacks — together these lower your true cost per transaction.

Key takeaways

  • A processing fee is interchange + assessments + markup; only the markup is negotiable.
  • Interchange goes to the issuing bank and is identical across processors — transparency is the test.
  • Interchange-plus beats tiered and usually flat-rate for established merchants.
  • Compare on your effective rate (total fees ÷ volume), never on headline rates.
  • Modern AI processing lowers cost two ways: fair markup plus more approvals and fewer chargebacks.

This article is educational and does not constitute financial advice. Fee figures are typical ranges and vary by provider, industry, and transaction profile.