Stop Losing Money To A High Priced Merchant Account
Business owners often overlook their merchant accounts because it only represents a small part of their overall financial picture. The reality is that merchants are overpaying and often don’t do anything about it because they believe it’s too much of a hassle to switch. Merchants that process transactions on a regular basis can save a significant amount of money by switching and it is significantly less work that most merchants might think.
The discount rate is the rate that banks charge each other to process transactions and is used to manage the risk associated with transactions as well. There are three different discount rates, there’s the qualified discount rate, the mid-qualified discount rate and the non-qualified rates. These rates vary depending on the type of credit card and some other components of the transaction.
There are per transaction fees for every merchant account. Sometimes this fee is not charged if the merchant has history and does a flat rate on just the discount rate. But even if the fee doesn’t show up on the statement, the merchant account provider and the bank still have this fee. They simply make it up in the discount rates. Flat rate pricing has one advantage and that is simply for accounting. It may be easier to know that every transaction is subject to a flat rate, either a flat per transaction or a flat percentage or discount rate.
If the average sale or average ticket items are small, the per transaction fees will represent a larger percentage of the overall fees than the discount rate. This fee doesn’t get taken advantage of by most merchant processors nearly as much as the discount rate, but shouldn’t be overlooked.
Merchants processing high tickets, the discount rate will usually always overshadow the per transaction fee simply because a $.25 per transaction fee for a $5,000 product is extremely small where a higher discount rate of say .5% higher on that $5,000 transaction represents an increase of $25. So if you process the higher ticket items, you need to negotiate as low as you can the discount rate even if you pay a higher per transaction fee.
Switching your merchant to a new provider is easy. Generally it only takes a few minutes to complete an online application and a few minutes of verifying your prices and fees to know that you’re saving money. Although the time span for switching to a new account isn’t quick, the actual time you personally spend is typically less than 30 minutes.
One of the reasons many merchants won’t switch their merchant accounts is because they have an existing contract for which they have an early termination fee. The irony here is that for most accounts, the savings on switching to a lower priced account far exceed the early termination fee. Some merchant account providers even offer a waiver or reimbursement to provide incentive for merchants to switch so if you find the right merchant account provider to go through, you’ll have that early termination fee with your existing processor covered.
Getting new equipment can also be a benefit of switching your merchant account. Competition for new merchant accounts is fierce so some of the incentives that processing companies are offering include new equipment. So, if your equipment is older or if you just want new equipment, make sure to ask about that and make that a part of your switching strategy.












