What ISOs Need to Know About Payment Processing Fees

TL;DR — Quick Summary

  • Payment processing fees are not a single number — they are a three-layer cost structure (interchange, scheme, processor margin) that ISOs must understand to quote accurately, debug statements, and win merchant trust.
  • The average merchant overpays by 0.3–0.8% on their processing rate due to hidden markups, mid-qualified transactions, and incorrect MCC codes — a gap ISOs can close with the right knowledge.
  • Statement auditing is the #1 trust-building tool in an ISO sales call: showing a merchant exactly where they are being overcharged converts more than any feature demo.
1.5–3.5%
Typical Merchant Rate

0.3–0.8%
Average Overcharge

$10K–50K
Annual Savings Audited

70%
Merchants Never Audited

Every merchant thinks they know what they pay for card processing. Almost none of them do.

That is not ignorance — it is by design. The payment processing industry has made its fee structure deliberately opaque. But for ISOs, understanding fees is the single most powerful sales tool you have.

1. The Three-Layer Fee Structure

Every card payment carries three separate fees, often bundled into a single rate:

Layer 1 — Interchange Fee (The Largest Piece, ~70% of total)

Set by the card issuing bank (Chase, Bank of America, etc.) and passed through to the merchant. Rates vary by card type (rewards cards = higher, debit = lower), transaction method (card-present vs. card-not-present), and security (tokenized = lower). Interchange cannot be marked up by ISOs — it is a pass-through.

Layer 2 — Scheme Fee (Network Assessment, ~10–15% of total)

Visa and Mastercard charge assessment fees on every transaction. These are flat fees + percentage, and they change quarterly. They are also non-negotiable and passed through to merchants.

Layer 3 — Processor Margin / markup (~15–20% of total)

This is where ISOs make money and where overcharges hide. The margin is the difference between the wholesale rate (interchange + scheme) and what the merchant pays. Tiered pricing hides this; interchange-plus pricing exposes it.

2. The Three Pricing Models

Model How It Works Merchant Cost ISO Margin
Tiered (Bundled) Qualifed/Mid-Qualified/Non-Qualified tiers Highest Best
Interchange-Plus Wholesale + fixed markup Lowest Moderate
Subscription (Flat Fee) Monthly fee + flat per-transaction Predictable Predictable

Tiered pricing is the industry’s most profitable — and most confusing. Merchants who think they are paying 2.0% actually pay 2.0% for “qualified” transactions (basic debit), 2.5–3.0% for “mid-qualified” (rewards credit), and 3.5–4.0%+ for “non-qualified” (premium rewards, corporate cards, B2B). Most real-world transactions land in mid or non-qualified.

Interchange-plus is the most transparent model. The merchant sees exactly what interchange cost was for each transaction, plus your markup. It typically saves merchants 0.2–0.5% compared to tiered — and ISOs can still earn solid margins on high-volume accounts.

3. Where Merchants Get Overcharged

The Hidden Fee Killer: 70% of merchants have never had their statement professionally audited. The average overcharge found on a first audit is $10K–$50K per year for mid-size merchants.
  • Mid-qualified downgrade: A rewards credit card transacted in a tiered plan is mid-qualified — but the merchant is often charged as if it were non-qualified. This alone adds 0.5–1.0% to the effective rate.
  • Incorrect MCC code: Gas stations, hotels, and auto repair shops frequently get coded as higher-risk MCCs, triggering non-qualified rates. Correcting the MCC saves 0.3–0.7%.
  • Batch header fee: Some processors charge $0.05–$0.25 per batch (daily settlement). Ignored by merchants but adds $15–$75/month.
  • PCI non-compliance fee: $10–$50/month for merchants who do not complete PCI compliance — even if they already qualify for a waiver.
  • Annual/monthly fee buried in fine print: $49–$199 annual fee, charged regardless of volume. Often missed on renewal.
  • Termination fee charged on cancellation: Contracts auto-renew, and early termination fees of $200–$500 are standard. Merchants often pay because they do not know they can negotiate.

4. How ISOs Should Discuss Fees

ISO Fee Conversation Script: “Most merchants I work with are paying about 2.9%. But what I actually care about is your effective rate — what you pay on every dollar you actually take in. That number is usually 3.1–3.6%. I can show you exactly where that gap is on your next statement — takes 10 minutes and you might find $5K–$20K you did not know you were leaving on the table.”

5. Statement Audit Playbook (10 Minutes to Win a Merchant)

Step 1: Get a recent monthly statement

Ask for the most recent full month statement — not a summary. The PDF with line items.

Step 2: Calculate the effective rate

Total fees ÷ Total volume = Effective rate. If they process $100K/month and pay $3,200 in fees, their effective rate is 3.2% — not the 2.5% they think.

Step 3: Identify the top 3 overcharges

Look for: mid-qualified downgrade pattern, annual fee, PCI non-compliance fee, high per-item fees on small transactions.

Step 4: Quote interchange-plus with your margin

Quote a flat markup over interchange (e.g., interchange + 0.25%). Show them the before/after on their actual transaction mix.

Bottom Line

Understanding payment processing fees is not just about competitive quoting — it is about being the ISO who actually helps merchants. Statement auditing builds trust faster than any feature list, and trust is what keeps merchants for 10 years instead of 18 months.

The merchants who understand their fees best are the ones ISOs should want to work with. And the merchants who have never looked — they are the ones who will be most grateful when you show them.


Data sources: Nilson Report 2026, Visa/Mastercard published interchange schedules (Q1 2026), Federal Reserve payments study 2025, merchant processor rate surveys. Statistics reflect U.S. market as of Q1 2026.

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