Discount Rate

Discount Rate — Definition & Guide
A discount rate is the percentage fee a payment processor retains from each card transaction before depositing the remaining funds into the merchant’s account. On a $500 sale with a 2.1% rate, the processor keeps $10.50 and deposits $489.50. The term is misleading — it is not a discount the merchant receives. It is the slice taken from every sale. The Federal Reserve’s interchange fee data shows how dramatically these costs vary across card types and transaction categories.
This quoted percentage is one of several fees on a merchant statement and does not capture the full cost of accepting cards. Per-item fees, monthly minimums, PCI fees, and non-qualified surcharges all add to the total. The only reliable benchmark for actual processing cost is the effective rate — total fees divided by total card volume.
When a processor quotes you a discount rate, they are quoting you the percentage they keep before you see your money. A 2.1% rate means for every $1,000 you process, $21 goes to the processor before anything else is counted.
The confusion around this term runs deep. Merchants hear “discount” and assume they are getting a deal. What they are actually being told is how much they are being charged. The word comes from the original practice of processors “discounting” transaction receipts — paying merchants less than the face value of each sale, similar to how a check cashing service works.
What makes this figure particularly misleading is what it leaves out. A processor can quote a competitive 1.8% while burying additional costs in per-item fees, monthly minimums, statement fees, and non-qualified surcharges that push the real cost well above 3%. This is why quoted rate comparisons between processors are almost always an apples-to-oranges exercise.
Here is how this fee fits into a typical card transaction:
The quoted rate is typically applied to the gross transaction amount. In tiered pricing models, different rates apply depending on how a card qualifies — with rewards cards, corporate cards, and manually keyed transactions often triggering higher non-qualified rates that are not reflected in the original quote.
The quoted percentage the processor retains per transaction. Does not include per-item fees, monthly fees, PCI fees, or non-qualified surcharges. Useful for marketing. Misleading as a cost benchmark.
Total fees divided by total card volume for a given period. Captures every cost including fees the discount rate ignores. The only accurate apples-to-apples comparison between processors.
The discount rate behaves differently depending on the pricing model your processor uses:
One fixed percentage applies to all transactions regardless of card type. Simple but often more expensive for businesses with a good card mix. Square and Stripe use this model.
For merchants who have outgrown flat-rate aggregators, Square alternatives built on real merchant accounts typically cut effective rates by 20–35%.
Multiple rates apply depending on how a transaction qualifies. Qualified rates are quoted low. Non-qualified rates — where most transactions actually land — are rarely disclosed upfront.
The processor’s markup is stated separately from interchange. There is no single “discount rate” — the actual cost varies by card type, which is transparent and auditable. The most honest pricing model available.
A discount rate is the percentage fee a payment processor retains from each card transaction before depositing the balance into the merchant’s account. On a $500 sale at a 2.1% discount rate, the processor keeps $10.50 and deposits $489.50.
No. The discount rate is a quoted percentage that typically excludes per-item fees, monthly fees, PCI fees, and non-qualified surcharges. The effective rate — total fees divided by total volume — captures every cost and is the only accurate benchmark for comparing processors.
No. A low quoted discount rate can hide high per-item fees, monthly minimums, PCI fees, and non-qualified surcharges that push the actual cost significantly higher. Always calculate effective rate from your full statement before drawing conclusions.
Discount rate alone is not a useful benchmark — effective rate is. For a small business on interchange-plus pricing, an effective rate between 1.8% and 2.5% is typical depending on card mix. Businesses processing primarily debit cards will sit lower. Businesses with high rewards card volume will sit higher. Learn more about payment processing consumer protections from the CFPB.
Your Quoted Discount Rate Isn’t Your Effective Rate. The Statement Shows the Difference.
Send us your last processing statement. We will calculate your true effective rate (total fees divided by total card volume), separate it from the quoted discount rate, and show you exactly where the gap is coming from.
Request a Free Statement ReviewNo obligation • For glossary readers comparing pricing models and processor options • Response within one business day