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An eCommerce payment service provider (PSP) is the infrastructure that authorizes, processes, and settles online card payments, connecting the customer’s card, the issuing bank, and your merchant account in under two seconds. Leading PSPs include Stripe (2.9% + $0.30), PayPal, Shopify Payments, Adyen, and Square, which bundle gateway, processing, and merchant account into a single integration. Because card-not-present transactions carry higher dispute rates, every PSP exposes merchants to chargebacks (0.5-1% of transactions) and network monitoring under Visa VAMP and Mastercard ECM at a 1.5% threshold. When choosing a PSP, weigh transaction fees, chargeback and dispute policies, fraud tooling, PCI DSS Level 1 compliance, and integration depth, not headline rates alone. Since no PSP recovers disputed revenue for you, pair it with automated dispute management like Chargeflow to protect margins.
Every online store runs on a payment service provider. Without one, you can't accept cards, process transfers, or move money from your customers to your bank account. Understanding how an eCommerce payment service provider works is foundational to running a healthy, profitable online business.
Knowing the risks is equally critical. This article covers how payment service providers operate and how to choose the right one. It explains what fees and chargebacks cost you and how to protect your revenue.
A payment service provider (PSP) is the infrastructure layer that authorizes, processes, and settles online transactions. It connects your customer, their bank, and your merchant account. When a shopper clicks "Buy Now," the PSP routes the transaction through a payment gateway.
It checks the card network (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover) and requests authorization from the issuing bank. If approved, funds queue for settlement into your account.
Most eCommerce merchants interact with a PSP through three tightly linked components:
Some providers bundle all three into one product. Stripe, PayPal, Shopify Payments, Square, and Adyen are classic examples. They're aggregators offering shared merchant accounts and single-integration processing.
Traditional acquiring banks and ISOs (Independent Sales Organizations) typically separate these layers and require a dedicated merchant account.
The practical difference matters. Aggregators are fast to set up, often developer-friendly, and require no long-term contracts.
Dedicated merchant accounts offer better rate negotiation at higher volumes. They provide stability against sudden holds, a real risk with aggregators if chargebacks spike.
Not every PSP is built for every business model. Here's how the major players stack up for eCommerce merchants:
Stripe is the developer-first choice. It offers rich API documentation, deep analytics, 100+ payment methods, and native integrations with most eCommerce platforms. Flat-rate pricing (2.9% + $0.30 per transaction in the US) ensures predictable costs at low-to-mid volumes.
Stripe aggressively holds funds or terminates accounts when chargebacks exceed thresholds.
PayPal wins on buyer trust and first-time conversion. Hesitant shoppers often complete purchases via PayPal. The downside: PayPal's dispute process is merchant-unfriendly with high inquiry and claim volumes.
Shopify Payments (powered by Stripe) is ideal for Shopify merchants. It eliminates third-party transaction fees and centralizes payment data in Shopify admin. The tradeoff: limited processor diversification.
Adyen targets mid-market and enterprise merchants. Interchange-plus pricing, global acquiring, and fraud tools are powerful. However, monthly minimums and complexity make it overkill for early-stage stores.
Square excels for omnichannel sellers. Its unified dashboard tracks revenue cleanly, though eCommerce features lag Stripe or Shopify Payments for online-only merchants.
Authorize.net and Braintree (PayPal's developer platform) suit merchants needing gateway flexibility. They work well with existing dedicated merchant accounts and modern checkout experiences.
When evaluating any payment service provider, prioritize transaction fees, chargeback policies, payment methods, integration depth, and dispute threshold enforcement.
No PSP sales deck mentions this: every payment service provider becomes a chargeback source. Accept card payments and you face disputes. Your PSP won't fight to recover that revenue.
Chargebacks occur when cardholders contact their bank to dispute charges instead of contacting you. The bank immediately debits your account and adds a dispute fee ($15-$100). You get a tight response window.
Miss it or submit weak evidence and the money is gone.
The average eCommerce chargeback rate is 0.5-1% of transactions. It sounds small but isn't. At $1M monthly revenue, 0.8% means $8,000 in disputes plus fees and shipping costs.
Exceeding Visa's 1.5% (VAMP) or Mastercard's 1.5% triggers network monitoring programs. This means escalating fines, remediation plans, and account termination risk.
Most PSPs provide a dispute portal and nothing else. You must gather order data, shipping confirmations, communication records, and IP logs. Then format everything into a compliant rebuttal by the deadline.
For growing brands, this is a full-time job.
Chargeflow Automation closes this gap. It connects to your PSP (Stripe, PayPal, Shopify Payments, Braintree, Adyen, and 100+ others). It detects disputes automatically, pulls 1,000+ data points per transaction, and submits compliant evidence.
You pay 25% only on recovered revenue, zero upfront, zero manual work.
Transaction fees get all the attention during vendor selection. They shouldn't be the only factor. Here's what actually determines your total cost of acceptance:
Chargeback and dispute policies. How does the PSP handle disputes? Do they auto-debit before you respond? What's the response window?
Does their portal support Visa CE 3.0 submissions? These details determine recoverable disputed revenue.
Fraud tooling. Most PSPs offer velocity rules and AVS/CVV checks. These stop stolen-card fraud at authorization but not friendly fraud.
Friendly fraud (cardholder receives order, uses it, disputes anyway) accounts for 60–80% of chargebacks. You need Chargeflow Prevent to catch it pre-dispute.
Alert and pre-dispute network access. Visa (Verifi) and Mastercard (Ethoca) run pre-dispute alert programs. When cardholders contact their bank, alerts fire before formal chargebacks.
This gives you time to refund and prevent disputes. Some PSPs participate; most don't surface them usefully. Chargeflow Alerts aggregates Verifi, Ethoca, and Chargeflow Network to deflect 90% of chargebacks pre-dispute.
Monitoring program risk. Know your PSP's thresholds and your proximity to them. Visa's VAMP and Mastercard's ECM impose $50–$100 fines per dispute when breached. Fines compound monthly.
Chargeflow Insights provides free, real-time chargeback tracking across processors and stores. Act before entering a program, not after.
Integration depth. Your PSP should connect cleanly to your eCommerce platform, CRM, helpdesk, and fraud stack. Fewer manual handoffs reduce overhead and speed dispute response.
An eCommerce payment service provider (PSP) is the infrastructure layer that authorizes, processes, and settles online transactions. It connects your customer’s card, their issuing bank, and your merchant account, completing authorization in under two seconds. Stripe, PayPal, Shopify Payments, Adyen, and Square are common PSPs bundling gateway, processor, and merchant account into one integration.
A payment gateway only encrypts and transmits card data from checkout to the processor. A payment service provider is the broader entity that includes the gateway plus processing and a merchant account. Stripe, PayPal, and Shopify Payments are full PSPs handling all three layers, while Authorize.net is primarily a gateway connecting to separate accounts.
Common payment service providers include Stripe, PayPal, Shopify Payments, Adyen, and Square, aggregators that bundle the gateway, processing, and a shared merchant account into one integration. Braintree and Authorize.net suit merchants needing gateway flexibility with a dedicated merchant account. The right choice depends on volume, business model, and chargeback policies.
Choose a payment service provider by weighing transaction fees, chargeback and dispute policies, supported payment methods, fraud tooling, PCI DSS Level 1 compliance, and integration depth, not headline rates alone. Check dispute thresholds and Visa CE 3.0 support. Aggregators like Stripe set up fast, while dedicated accounts win on rate negotiation above $500K per month.
There is no single best eCommerce payment service provider; it depends on your model. Stripe leads for developers and analytics, PayPal for buyer trust and conversion, Shopify Payments for Shopify stores, and Adyen for enterprise and global acquiring. Compare fees, chargeback enforcement, and integrations, since aggregators can hold funds when disputes spike.
The cheapest payment service provider depends on volume. Flat-rate aggregators like Stripe (2.9% + $0.30) are cost-effective at low-to-mid volume but expensive at scale. Interchange-plus pricing through Adyen or a dedicated merchant account delivers lower rates above $500K per month. Factor in dispute fees ($15–$100), monthly minimums, and surcharges, not just headline rates.
Yes, many high-volume merchants run multiple payment service providers at once. Multi-processor setups reduce single-point-of-failure risk, enable lowest-cost routing, and help keep each processor below dispute thresholds. The tradeoff is managing chargeback data across providers; tools like Chargeflow Insights unify dispute data from Stripe, PayPal, Adyen, and others in one dashboard.
Your payment service provider monitors your chargeback ratio continuously. Breaching internal thresholds (typically 1% for aggregators) can trigger account reviews, rolling reserves, or termination, while Visa VAMP and Mastercard ECM add external fines of $50–$100 per dispute. Most merchants target a ratio under 0.7% as a buffer below the 1.5% network limit.
At minimum, support major cards (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover), PayPal, and Apple Pay or Google Pay. For international customers, add local methods like iDEAL (Netherlands), SEPA (Europe), and Alipay (China). Buy Now Pay Later options such as Klarna and Afterpay are expected in fashion, beauty, and electronics and boost checkout conversion.
Reputable payment service providers are PCI DSS Level 1 compliant, the highest security tier, which shrinks your merchant liability surface by handling sensitive card data and tokenization. Verifying certification is a required PSP evaluation step. Look also for 3DS2 authentication and AI-based fraud scoring, which are non-negotiable for meaningful card-not-present (CNP) volume.
Choosing the right payment service provider is foundational, but only half the equation. Every PSP generates chargebacks, and none fight to recover revenue for you.
Merchants protecting margins pair their PSP with automated dispute management, pre-dispute alerts, and chargeback analytics. Chargeflow connects to every major PSP and handles disputes on autopilot, recovering revenue you'd otherwise lose.

Vorder 4 keer meer terugboekingen terug en voorkom tot wel 90% van de inkomende terugboekingen, dankzij AI en een wereldwijd netwerk van 20.000 handelaren.