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Effective Rate Calculator — Find Your True Processing Cost
Use this effective rate calculator with your real card volume and processing fees to see the exact percentage you pay to accept cards — the one number that lets you compare any two processors honestly.

Calculate Your Effective Rate
Monthly card volume, total processing fees, and any fixed monthly charges. The verdict updates as you type.
Why Your Effective Rate Is the Only Honest Comparison Number
Every processor advertises a rate. Almost none of them charge that rate. The effective rate is total fees ÷ total card volume — the math that strips out the marketing and shows what you actually paid per dollar processed. It is the only number that lets you compare a flat-rate processor against an interchange-plus processor against a tiered processor without getting lost in pricing structure differences.
According to the Federal Reserve’s interchange fee data, average interchange varies significantly by card type — rewards cards, corporate cards, and card-not-present transactions all carry materially higher costs than basic debit. The effective rate captures all of this in a single number, which is why it is the question to ask before any other.
For why tiered and flat-rate pricing consistently produce a higher effective rate, see how tiered pricing works and interchange-plus pricing explained.
Reading the Statement Before You Run the Calculator
Full context on what each line item means is in the companion post, how to read your merchant processing statement. The calculator does the math; the post explains what you are looking at.
How Effective Rate Reads Differently on Each Pricing Model
Interchange-plus statements separate each cost layer — interchange, network assessments, processor markup — on individual line items, making the merchant effective rate straightforward to verify and reproduce. The markup line is the only piece the processor controls; everything else is pass-through.
Flat-rate statements bundle everything into one percentage, so the effective rate calculator result is simple to produce but the component breakdown is invisible. A flat 2.9% effective rate hides whether interchange ran 1.6% or 2.1% that month — and the processor keeps the difference either way.
Tiered statements assign transactions to qualified, mid-qualified, and non-qualified buckets. Most rewards and corporate cards land in higher tiers, so the processing effective rate on tiered pricing is usually well above the advertised qualified rate. For why this gap exists by design, read why processors overcharge.
A processor advertising a “1.59% qualified rate” on a tiered statement is not technically lying — that is the rate qualified transactions pay. The trap is that most rewards cards, corporate cards, and card-not-present transactions never qualify for that tier. The effective rate captures what your card mix actually paid, regardless of which bucket the processor assigned each transaction to.
What Causes Effective Rate to Change Month to Month
A higher share of rewards cards, corporate cards, or international cards raises interchange costs. Transactions where the card is not physically present — phone orders, keyed entries — typically cost more than chip or tap transactions. Chargebacks add penalty fees of $15–50 each. In months where volume drops, fixed monthly fees become a higher percentage of a smaller base — pushing the effective rate up even when transaction-level pricing has not changed at all.
Running this calculator monthly is the fastest way to spot when any of these factors have shifted your real cost, before the cumulative impact becomes a larger problem. Our post on interchange fees explained covers how card type and entry method affect your effective rate in detail.
Frequently Asked Questions
It varies by industry, acceptance method, and ticket size. Card-present businesses typically run lower than card-not-present businesses. Most well-structured retail accounts run 1.8–2.3%. Above 2.5% consistently is worth reviewing. Above 3.0% is almost always a tiered or flat-rate pricing structure that can be improved.
For routine month-over-month comparison, separate unusual penalties so the trend line stays clean. For total cost analysis — especially when shopping a new processor — include them. The full financial impact of the processing relationship includes the bad months, not just the average ones.
Yes. A clear effective rate gives you a strong baseline when asking another processor to beat your current pricing. It is much harder to obscure markup when both parties are working from the same total cost number. Use the result alongside a free statement review to compare processor rates before committing to any switch.
More Calculators and Companion Reading
If Your Effective Rate Came in Above 2.5%, Send Us the Statement
Marisol Vega ran this same math on her statement and the calculator came back at 3.1%. Her processor had quoted “2.45%” eighteen months earlier — the gap was the difference between the qualified rate and what her actual card mix produced under tiered pricing. Brookside ran her real volume against a real interchange-plus quote and the projection landed at 2.05%. We will do the same for you: read your current statement, calculate exactly what you would pay under interchange-plus, and give you the dollar difference in writing. Learn more about payment processing consumer protections from the CFPB.
Request Your Free Statement ReviewNo obligation • No pressure • Response within one business day