Understanding Interchange Plus Pricing: The Best Value for Small Business Merchants
Aug 23, 2025Arnold L.
Understanding Interchange Plus Pricing: The Best Value for Small Business Merchants
For small business owners, credit card processing fees can often feel like a "black box"—a complex and confusing set of costs that eat into your profit margins every month. To make the best financial decisions for your company, it’s essential to understand the different pricing models available in the payment processing industry.
Among the various structures, Interchange Plus Pricing is widely considered the most transparent and cost-effective model for most established merchants. In this guide, we will break down how it works and how it stacks up against other common pricing models.
What is Interchange Plus Pricing?
Interchange plus pricing is a structure that clearly separates the wholesale costs of credit card processing from the payment processor’s unique markups.
The name refers to the two main components of your fees:
1. Interchange: The wholesale rates and fees set by card networks (like Visa and Mastercard) but paid to the banks that issue the cards. These fees are the same for every merchant in the industry.
2. Plus: The "markup" that your payment processor charges for their services, which typically includes a small percentage of the transaction and a flat per-transaction fee.
The primary advantage of this model is transparency. You can see exactly what the wholesale cost was and exactly how much your processor is earning from your business.
How Interchange Plus Pricing Works
In an interchange plus model, the processor passes the wholesale costs directly to you without any bundling or hidden categories.
Wholesale Costs include:
- Interchange Rates: These vary depending on the type of card (debit vs. rewards credit), how the card is processed (in-person vs. online), and the industry of the business.
- Assessments: Fees paid directly to the card brands (Visa, Mastercard, Discover, etc.) for using their networks.
Interchange Plus in Action
Suppose you are on an "Interchange + 0.30% + $0.10" plan. If a customer makes a $100 purchase using a card with a wholesale interchange rate of 1.50% + $0.10:
- Wholesale Cost: $1.50 (1.50%) + $0.10 = $1.60
- Processor’s Markup: $0.30 (0.30%) + $0.10 = $0.40
- Total Transaction Cost: $1.60 + $0.40 = $2.00
In this scenario, you know exactly where every cent of that $2.00 fee went.
Interchange Plus vs. Other Pricing Models
1. Interchange Plus vs. Flat Rate Pricing
Flat rate pricing (commonly offered by payment aggregators like Square or Stripe) applies a single, set rate to every transaction (e.g., 2.9% + $0.30).
* The Pro: It’s incredibly simple to understand and predict.
* The Con: It’s often more expensive for established businesses. Because the aggregator has to cover the highest possible interchange rates, they build a large margin into their flat rate.
2. Interchange Plus vs. Tiered Pricing
Tiered pricing bundles transactions into "Qualified," "Mid-Qualified," and "Non-Qualified" buckets.
* The Problem: The processor defines the buckets and can move transactions into higher-priced tiers without clear explanation. This makes it almost impossible to tell how much you are actually paying in markups.
Is Interchange Plus Always the Cheapest?
While interchange plus is usually the most cost-effective for businesses processing a significant volume of payments, it might not be the best fit for everyone.
- Established Businesses: If you process more than $5,000 to $10,000 a month, interchange plus will likely save you a significant amount over flat rate models.
- Low-Volume or Seasonal Sellers: If you only process a few hundred dollars a month, the monthly service fees often associated with dedicated merchant accounts might outweigh the savings on transaction rates. In these cases, a flat rate aggregator might be cheaper.
How Zenind Supports Your Business Operations
At Zenind, we believe that transparency is the key to running a successful business. Just as we provide clear, straightforward pricing for our business formation and registered agent services, we want our customers to have the knowledge they need to choose the right financial partners.
By helping you form the right legal entity and providing ongoing compliance support, we ensure your business has the professional foundation it needs to qualify for the best merchant account rates in the industry.
Conclusion
Interchange plus pricing is the gold standard for merchants who value transparency and want to keep their processing costs as low as possible. By understanding the difference between wholesale costs and processor markups, you can take control of your business’s finances and ensure you are getting the best value for every dollar you earn.
Ready to build your business on a solid foundation? Contact Zenind today to learn more about our formation and compliance services.
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