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Payment Processing Glossary

Flat-Rate PricingWhat Is Flat-Rate Pricing?

what is flat-rate pricing payment processing explained

What Is Flat-Rate Pricing? — Definition & Guide

Flat-rate pricing is a payment processing model where the merchant pays a single fixed percentage on every card transaction regardless of card type, entry method, or interchange rate. Common with payment facilitators like Square, Stripe, and PayPal, flat-rate payment processing offers simplicity at the cost of transparency — and typically becomes more expensive than interchange-plus pricing above $10,000–$15,000 per month in volume. Understanding what is flat-rate pricing is the first step to knowing whether you are paying too much.

For merchants who have outgrown flat-rate aggregators, Square alternatives built on real merchant accounts typically cut effective rates by 20–35%.

With flat-rate merchant services, one percentage applies to every transaction — a basic debit card, a standard Visa, and a premium airline miles card all cost the same rate. That simplicity is the appeal. The problem is that card costs vary dramatically underneath. A basic debit card might carry an interchange rate of 0.05% + $0.21, but under a flat-rate model you still pay 2.6%. The processor pockets the difference.

At low volumes — under $5,000 per month — that overpayment is small enough that the convenience justifies it. At higher volumes, the math shifts quickly. A merchant processing $50,000 per month on flat rate payment processing at 2.6% pays approximately $1,300/month. The same volume under interchange-plus pricing typically costs $950–$1,050. That difference compounds to $3,000–$4,200 per year on a single account.

The Federal Reserve publishes average interchange fee data that illustrates just how much variation exists across card types — variation that flat-rate pricing completely ignores when setting your rate.

Square charges 2.6% + $0.10 on every in-person transaction. A basic debit card might have an interchange of 0.05% + $0.21, but the merchant pays 2.6% regardless. On a $100 transaction, the merchant pays $2.70 to Square and Square pays roughly $0.26 in actual interchange — keeping approximately $2.44. On a premium rewards card with 2.1% interchange, Square pays $2.10 and keeps only $0.60. The processor profits most on the cheapest cards — exactly the ones that would save merchants the most under interchange-plus.

Here is the flow of a typical flat rate vs interchange-plus comparison:

Every transaction → same rateDebit card: true cost 0.5%, charged 2.6%Rewards card: true cost 2.1%, charged 2.6%Processor averages risk; merchant overpays on most cards

Under interchange-plus pricing, the merchant pays the actual interchange rate for each card type plus a small fixed markup — typically 0.15%–0.40%. The markup is visible as a separate line item on the statement, making it verifiable and negotiable.

Flat-rate pricing is not always the wrong choice. It tends to make sense in two specific situations:

  • Very low volume (<$5,000/month) — At this volume, the dollar difference between flat-rate and interchange-plus is small enough that the simplicity and lack of monthly fees can outweigh the cost premium.
  • Just starting out — Flat-rate processors like Square offer instant approval with no underwriting. Speed of setup sometimes matters more than cost optimization early in a business life.

Above $10,000–$15,000/month, the savings from switching to interchange-plus consistently exceed any transition costs. Flat rate merchant services work for early-stage businesses — but at meaningful volume, the cost premium is hard to justify. Use the Effective Rate Calculator to model your specific volume. For a full comparison, see our pricing model comparison.

Is flat-rate pricing ever the right choice?

For very low volume businesses (under $5,000/month), the simplicity may outweigh the higher cost. Above that threshold, interchange-plus typically saves money — often significantly.

How much more does flat-rate cost than interchange-plus?

For most businesses, flat-rate costs 0.3%–0.8% more than interchange-plus. On $100,000/month, that is $300–$800 in extra fees every month — $3,600–$9,600 per year.

Do Square and Stripe use flat-rate pricing?

Yes. Both are payment facilitators using a flat-rate model. This enables fast sign-up and simple statements but typically costs more than a dedicated merchant account with interchange-plus pricing at meaningful volume.

What is the difference between flat-rate and tiered pricing?

Both bundle interchange into a blended rate, but tiered pricing uses multiple rate buckets (qualified, mid-qualified, non-qualified) rather than a single flat rate. Neither model gives you visibility into your actual interchange costs. Interchange-plus is the only model that does. Learn more about payment processing consumer protections from the CFPB.

For merchants on flat-rate pricing wondering whether to switch

Flat-Rate Pricing Hides How Much of Your Rate Is Markup. The Math Reverses Above $15,000/Month.

Send us your last processing statement. We will calculate what interchange-plus would cost at your volume versus your current flat rate, show the breakeven point, and tell you whether switching makes sense at your current size.

Request a Free Statement Review

No obligation • For glossary readers comparing pricing models and processor options • Response within one business day

Call (833) 382-1992 Email hello@brooksidepayments.com