Now that your business is ready to take payments, it’s time to think about how you’ll be processing payments. Alternatively, you might just want to change your current payment system. What are the best payment processors for you and your business?
You’ll find that payment processors perform largely the same tasks, but it could be a single feature – or the cost – that’ll steer your final decision.
Knowing what’s on the market will help get you going, which is why we’ve compiled a list of the most widely recognised systems. But first: a quick definition.
>See also: Why getting up to speed on card payments is essential for SMEs
>See also: Setting up card payments for retail and online selling
What payment processor should I go for?
Let’s compare some of the best payment processors on the market, focusing on cost, pros, cons and what kind of payments the system is best suited to.
Or, if you feel like you’re ready to decide, why not get quotes today. All you need to do is provide us with some basic info about your business in the form at the top of the page and we’ll match you with the best providers for your needs.
WorldPay
What is it? WorldPay has specialist small business packages which you can fit to your requirements.
You can choose your equipment and pricing plan. You’ve got your pick of countertop card machines, portable card machines, mobile card machines and Pax terminals.
It can also take a variety of global payments. You can accept Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, Diners’ Club International, Discover, China Union Pay, JCB and American Express (with a separate agreement).
How much does it cost? WorldPay has three packages:
Gateway Standard (£19 a month)
It has:
- 350 transactions included
- No set-up fee
- Visa Checkout
- PayPal
- Digital payment links
- Phone payments
- Standard fraud management tools
- Support service
Gateway Advanced (£45 a month)
Everything on the Standard plan, plus:
- International payment methods
- Additional alternative payment methods such as Apple Pay
- 850 transactions included
Bespoke
Many of the features on the other two packages, plus:
- Lowest transaction fee based on volumes
- Advanced fraud management tools
- 24/7 support line
- Fully customisable
- Account management
Pros: Strong customer reviews on TrustPilot, can deal with all types of different payments with one merchant ID.
Cons: Auto renewal can catch some customers out unless they write to WorldPay 30 days before contract end telling them they don’t want to renew, reports of pushy salespeople.
Best for: Medium-sized businesses with consistent transaction levels all year round or more established businesses with higher transaction volumes and more complex needs.
Zettle
What is it? Zettle by PayPal (formerly iZettle) offers up a point of sale, card reader, invoicing and an eCommerce platform. Manage your inventory, send abandoned cart emails and get a better grasp of your performance with real-time sales analytics. It has the ability to generate sales reports, do inventory management and track staff performance.
How much does it cost?
Zettle Payment Terminal (£149 a month + VAT)
All-in-one reader and POS service
No monthly fee
1.75 per cent transaction fee
It has:
- Preloaded SIM card in case WiFi is unavailable. Mobile usage covered in original policy
- Terminal with built-in barcode scanner for speed and ease of transaction
- POS app which helps to manage inventory and print receipts
- Get bank deposits in 1-2 business days
- Accepts PayPal QRC, Payment Links, Apple Pay and Google Pay
Zettle Card Reader 2 (£29 a month + VAT)
Card reader only
No monthly fee
1.75 per cent transaction fee
It has:
- Payment data encryption
- Is tamper-proof
- Capabilities to work with a range of POS apps
- Integrates with platforms you may already use including lightspeed, quickbooks and BigCommerce
- 12-month warranty
Pros: This payment processing platform has no contract and the ability to integrate with Xero and Shopify. It’s also compatible with iOS and Android, accepting Samsung, Google and Apple Pay. It has a visually pleasing design and you get deposits to your bank account in one-two business days.
Cons: The only phone support is available 9am-5pm Monday to Friday.
Best for: Food and drink, retail, health and beauty and service-based businesses that run on multiple platforms.
Square
What is it? With Square, you set up an account and buy a reader online or in-store. You’ve got the option to take payments in person, over the phone, by invoice or online. The basic version comes with free real-time analytics as well as inventory and location management.
How much does it cost?
Chip and PIN, mobile and contactless payments in person: 1.75 per cent
Manually entered transactions: 2.5 per cent
Online payments with UK cards: 1.4 per cent + 25p
Online payments with non-UK cards: 2.5 per cent + 25p
Pros: Square is an easy to use payment gateway with quick launch and a free magnetic stripe reader which accepts international cards. Invoicing and virtual terminal are also included. Integrate Xero and Synder, elect to get your money the next business day.
Cons: Reviews on Trustpilot reveal that customer service is poor
Best for: Small businesses with less consistent sales who want to start up quickly.
Stripe
What is it? Stripe is a payment solution for online payments which is customisable with applications and third-party integrations.
How much does it cost? Depending on the size and sales volume of your business, you’ve got two options.
Integrated
(From April 10, 2023)
UK cards: 1.5 per cent + 20p
Premium UK cards: 1.9 per cent + 20p
European cards: 2.5 per cent + 20p
Link cards: 1.2 per cent + 20p
International cards: 3.25 per cent + 20p
Customised
You can design a custom package for your business if you have large payments volume or unique business needs. Base it on volume discounts, interchange pricing, multi-product discounts and country-specific rates.
Pros: It offers simplicity, with customised billing plans for membership and subscriptions, rolling bank transfers which can be made weekly or monthly depending on when you want to get paid. Stripe also offers integration with the mobile app, uses over 135 different currencies and customers don’t need a Stripe account in order to pay, so the process is seamless. There are no setup fees, monthly fees or hidden fees to worry about either.
Cons: The chargeback policy may lead to some aggravation. You’ll be charged £20 for any disputed transactions (from April 10, 2023).
Best for: Online businesses with access to a developer.
GoCardless
What is it? Collect one-off or recurring payments with GoCardless, with a package specifically geared at small businesses.
How much does it cost?
- Standard: £0 (pay per transaction only)
- Plus: £50 per month
- Pro: £200 per month
- Custom: volume-based pricing
Pros: Has integrations with Xero, QuickBooks, Sage and Salesforce, successfully collects 99 per cent of one-off payments and 97 per cent of recurring payments are collected first time, customisable packages, no set-up costs.
Cons: Takes a while for payments to clear, limits to how many currencies it can accept, can be difficult to track payments.
Best for: Small businesses looking for ease.
Amazon Pay
What is it? I’m sure this payment system needs little explanation. Customers on Amazon Pay can make purchases using their Amazon account on eligible websites and apps and do their shopping by voice with Amazon Pay for Alexa Skills.
How much does it cost? If your monthly payment volume is under £50,000, your payment processing fee will be 2.7 per cent and the authorisation fee will be 30p per transaction.
If it’s over £50,000, then you can apply to Amazon for a payment volume discount.
Cross border fees (for sales outside the UK): up to 1.5pc
Chargeback dispute fee: £14.
Pros: Amazon Pay gets a huge boost from its name recognition – lots of people have an Amazon account. Shopping is quick and easy if the user is already logged in, but you can embed a “buy now” button on your site to make purchasing even easier. It’s also high security, offers merchant protection and integrates with Shopify and BigCommerce
Cons: Amazon Pay can be quite a target for fraudsters. You may find your account being shut down without prior warning for security reasons, there’s no PayPal support and the transaction fee is pretty high.
Best for: Online retail businesses.
Shopify Payments
What is it? Shopify Payments allows you to accept credit cards directly with Shopify in contactless, Chip and PIN or by swiping the customer’s card.
Offers online payments solutions and eCommerce as well as a point of sale system.
How much does it cost?
The standard prices are listed below but using Shopify Payments removes the commission Shopify takes on top of payment gateway fees. That’s 2 per cent on Basic, 1 per cent on Shopify and 0.5 per cent on Advanced.
Basic Shopify
Monthly cost: £25 (£1 per month for the first three months)
Online credit card transaction fees: 2 per cent +25p
In-person credit card fees: 1.7 per cent
Shopify
Monthly cost: £65 (£1 per month for the first three months)
Online credit card transaction fees: 1.7 per cent + 25p
In-person credit card fees: 1.6 per cent
Advanced
Monthly cost: £344 (£1 per month for the first three months)
Online credit card transaction fees: 1.5 per cent + 25p
In-person credit card fees: 1.5 per cent
Pros: You can set up Shopify Payments instantly and try it out free for three days. Your customers can still pay through another payment system if they prefer. However, using Shopify Payments removes extra transaction fees.
Cons: Shopify also has chargeback fees of £10 per chargeback and, like Stripe, if the decision doesn’t go your way, you lose the fee.
Best for: Online retail businesses.
SumUp
What is it? SumUp offers card readers that can be used on-site or on the go.
How much does it cost?
If you get a SumUp card reader with a Business Account, it’ll be:
Transaction fee: 1.49 per cent for the first month (can be extended into the next month if you make at least six card purchases worth £10 or more)
You’ll receive sales within one day, even on weekends
Free Mastercard
From then, it’ll be:
Transaction fee: 1.69 per cent
Fee for card-not-present payments: 2.5 per cent
Cost for the reader: Air £39, SumUp Air and cradle £44, SumUp Solo £79, SumUp Solo and printer £129
Pros: SumUp’s offering has a fixed transaction rate which is lower than its competitors and no monthly fee. It also has paperless onboarding and no contractual obligations. The Air can process over 500 transactions on a single charge while the Solo card reader has unlimited mobile data and WiFi connectivity.
Cons: There’s no phone support on weekends or late evenings and their social media feeds have several complaints about poor customer service.
Best for: Remote businesses, such as freelance beauticians or food vans.
Adyen
What is it? Adyen has the ability to take online payments and in-person with a POS system. If your customer is paying online, they can do so through the web, in-app, pay by link or subscription. It also has AI-powered fraud protection
How much does it cost?
You’ll be charged a processing fee of €0.11 (9p), plus a fee depending on what payment method you use.
Pros: Adyen has no monthly fee and no set-up, integration or closure fees.
Cons: With the fees it does charge, it’s expensive for businesses with lower volumes of sales. Plus, it’s no good for high-risk merchants (ones that get a significant number of chargebacks) as you’re more likely to get blocked. The system is not really designed for brand-new start-ups – you must a minimum of 1,000 transactions a month to keep your account in good standing. Reviews on TrustPilot say that the customer service is lacking.
Best for: Better for larger SMEs, not start-ups.
Cybersource
What is it? Owned by Visa, Cybersource allows you to accept payments online, in-person and via mobile throughout the world. Automated screening helps you prevent fraud and Click to Pay allows customers to pay faster without account details or passwords, meaning happier customers and a lower likelihood of abandoned carts.
How much does it cost?
You must contact Cybersource directly to find out pricing.
Pros: Cybersource has payment acceptance in over 160 countries around the world in more than 50 currencies.
Cons: Larger sales volumes incur larger fees and it’s available on a long contract. On top of that, you can’t access transactions that are more than six months old, no free trial.
Best for: More established small business who have developers.
Opayo
What is it? Opayo (formerly Sage Pay) offers solutions for online payments, card terminals, phone and point of sale.
How much does it cost?
Pricing plans are split as follows:
Face-to-face payments
Start Simple: £0 – 1.75 per cent transaction fee, £29 one-off device fee
Business Booster: From £15 per month with a 0.99 per cent transaction fee
Operate Smarter: £40 per month with a one per cent transaction fee
Business Control: £62 per month with a one per cent transaction fee
Payments online (also covers payments over the phone and by mail)
Always Open – Fixed: £25 per month, from 0.99 per cent transaction fee, no joining fee
Always – Pay as you go: £0 with transaction fee from 1.99 per cent, 0.12 gateway click fee, £99 one-off joining fee
Pros: No hidden fees, 24/7 telephone support available, quick to set up, strong customer service reviews on Trustpilot.
Cons: Opayo is more expensive than Sage Pay was.
Best for: Small businesses who want to go with a trusted name.
Further reading on payments
Five tips to get started taking card payments
High risk merchant accounts: What you need to know
How to set up a POS system for your small business
Looking to take card payments?
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