The Questions I Wish Every Merchant Would Ask Me
Not the questions on every “how to choose a payment processor” checklist. These are the payment processor questions that reveal whether you are dealing with an honest payment processor or a commission-driven sales pitch.

Every few months someone publishes another list of questions to ask your payment processor before signing. Most of them say the same things. Ask about fees. Ask about contracts. Ask about customer service. Ask if they are PCI compliant.
Those questions to ask your payment processor are not wrong. They are just not the ones that actually matter.
The questions to ask your payment processor that matter are the ones a sales rep does not want to answer. The ones that reveal whether you are dealing with someone who is going to tell you the truth — or someone who is going to tell you what you want to hear long enough to get a signature.
I have been on both sides of this table. Here are the questions to ask your payment processor — the real merchant account questions — that I genuinely wish more merchants would raise — and what an honest answer sounds like.
“What is your markup — not my rate, your markup?”
There is a difference between your processing rate and the processor’s markup. Your rate includes interchange — the cost set by Visa and Mastercard that goes to the card-issuing bank — plus the processor’s cut on top. Most reps quote you the total rate. Almost none of them volunteer what their piece of it is.
The question to ask is specific: “What is your markup, expressed as a percentage and a per-transaction fee, on top of interchange?”
Under interchange-plus pricing, this should be a clean, one-sentence answer. Something like: “Our markup is 0.25% plus $0.10 per transaction.” That is it. That is the whole number.
If the answer you get back is about your “total effective rate” or “all-in pricing” or anything that does not directly answer what the processor keeps — you are talking to someone who does not want you to know what they are making.
“Our markup is X% plus $Y per transaction. Everything else on your statement is interchange — the card network’s cost, which we pass through at cost.”
“If my account gets flagged, who do I call?”
Of all the questions to ask your payment processor, this is the one nobody thinks to raise until they need the answer at the worst possible moment.
Payment processors can freeze accounts. It happens — sometimes for legitimate fraud concerns, sometimes because an algorithm flagged an unusual transaction. When it happens to you, on a Friday afternoon, with a weekend of sales ahead, you will want to know exactly who to call and what they can actually do.
You submit a ticket and you wait. No account manager who knows your business. No escalation path that reliably produces a human. Funds can sit frozen for 90 to 180 days.
“You call me directly. I am your account manager. If there is a hold, I can see it in the system, I can tell you why it happened, and I can escalate it to underwriting the same day.”
“Have you ever told a prospect they were better off staying where they were?”
Of all the questions to ask your payment processor, this one tends to produce the longest pause.
A processor who will only ever tell you to switch is a processor who is selling, not advising. The honest reality is that switching does not always make sense — and someone who genuinely has your interest in mind will tell you that.
Maybe you are processing $6,000 a month and the savings would be $40 before accounting for switching friction. Maybe your current processor has been solid for five years. Maybe you have a custom integration that would cost more to migrate than you would save in a year.
“Yes. If the math does not work, I will tell you. I would rather lose a sale than put you into something that does not make sense for your business.”
“Can I see a real statement from a business like mine — not a sample?”
Sample statements are marketing documents. They show the cleanest possible version of what your statement could look like — a simple card mix, no downgrades, no unusual fees, everything qualifying at the best rate.
A real statement from a real business in your industry shows you what actually happens. The debit transactions. The rewards cards. The corporate cards that carry higher interchange. The month where volume spiked and a few transactions triggered a manual review fee.
“Here is a redacted statement from a retailer close to your volume. Let me walk you through every line.” If a processor will not show you a real statement — even a redacted one — the answer to that question is its own answer.
“What happens to the money in my account if you drop me?”
This is one of the most important questions to ask your payment processor — and the one that makes people most uncomfortable.
When Square, Stripe, or PayPal closes or freezes an account, your funds do not move to you immediately. They hold them — typically for 90 days, sometimes longer — as a reserve against potential chargebacks. The funds in your processor account are not treated like money in a bank account. They are an unsecured claim until released.
For merchants who have outgrown flat-rate aggregators, Square alternatives built on real merchant accounts typically cut effective rates by 20–35%.
“Your funds are held by the acquiring bank. If there is a termination for any reason, standard settlement timelines apply — typically 2–5 business days for settled funds. There is no 90-day hold provision in our agreement.”
“What’s your chargeback threshold — and what happens if I hit it?”
Every processor has a chargeback threshold — typically 1% of transactions. According to the Federal Reserve’s payment systems oversight framework, processors manage risk through thresholds like these. Cross it and things get complicated fast. Your account can be placed in a monitoring program, your rates can increase, or in serious cases your account can be terminated and you end up on the MATCH list.
Merchants in flagged verticals need specialized underwriting — see high-risk payment processing for how approval and pricing work outside the standard rails.
What processors often do not volunteer is what happens when you cross it. Crossing it once — because of a bad month, a disputed batch, a fraud event that was not your fault — can have consequences that outlast the original problem.
“Our threshold is 1% of monthly transactions. If you get close, I will reach out before it is a problem. Here is what the remediation process looks like if it ever comes to that.”
“What’s your early termination fee, and how is it structured?”
The ETF is the last question most merchants raise before signing. It should be one of the first. Every processor has one — the number and the structure determine whether you are signing a three-year relationship or a three-year lock-in.
Ask two specific questions: “What is the ETF dollar amount or formula?” and “Does the contract auto-renew?” The full early termination fee methodology walks through when paying it is worth it; the early termination fee calculator runs the breakeven math in thirty seconds.
“Our ETF is $X, flat. The contract is 36 months with a 30-day cancellation notice requirement. It does not auto-renew — at the end of the term you go month-to-month unless we mutually agree to renew.”
The One Question Behind All the Others
All seven questions to ask your payment processor on this list are really asking the same thing: Are you going to tell me the truth when it is not in your interest to?
That is the only question that matters. The fees, the contracts, the markup, the freeze policies — those things are important, but they are details. The relationship either has honesty at its foundation or it does not. And you can usually tell within the first conversation.
A processor who fields these questions directly, without deflecting, without pivoting to their sales pitch, without making you feel like you are being difficult for asking — that is someone worth talking to. Those are the payment processor red flags that matter more than any rate sheet.
A processor who gets uncomfortable, vague, or defensive when you ask what their markup is? That tells you everything you need to know before you sign anything.
Frequently Asked Questions
“What is your markup — not my rate, your markup?” The effective rate combines interchange, assessments, and the processor’s fee. Most processors deflect to the effective rate because it hides their margin. A transparent processor can state their markup in basis points or flat fee per transaction without hesitation.
Ask directly: “Have you ever told a prospect they were better off staying where they were?” and “Have you ever closed an account in my industry?” A processor who works honestly will answer both. One who deflects or pivots to selling is telling you something about how they operate when things get difficult.
Ask what their chargeback threshold is and what happens if you hit it. Ask who handles disputes — a dedicated rep or an automated system. Ask whether you get advance notice before funds are held. The answers reveal whether you will have a partner during a dispute or a policy document and a hold on your account.
Ask for the ETF dollar amount or formula in writing, and ask whether the contract auto-renews. A flat ETF is easier to math against than liquidated damages. Knowing the structure before you sign prevents the surprise of a $3,000 exit fee three years in.
More on the answers most processors do not volunteer
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