The Payment Method That Skips the Card Networks Entirely

The Payment Method That Skips the Card Networks Entirely
A property management company I work with collects rent from about 140 units every month. For years, they were processing those payments by card — either through an online portal or by running cards manually over the phone. At an average rent of $1,800 and a processing rate of 2.6%, they were paying roughly $47 per transaction in fees. Multiply that by 140 units and you get $6,580 in processing fees every single month.
That is not a rounding error. That is a business model change. Here is what ACH payment processing is, how it works, and which businesses should be using it.
What Is ACH Payment Processing?
ACH stands for Automated Clearing House — the electronic network that moves money directly between bank accounts in the United States. When you set up a direct deposit, pay a utility bill online, or receive a tax refund, you are using the ACH network. It is the same infrastructure that processes over 30 billion transactions per year in the US.
ACH payment processing for businesses works the same way — it pulls or pushes funds directly from a customer’s bank account to yours, bypassing Visa, Mastercard, and every card network entirely. No interchange fees. No card brand assessments. No processor markup on a percentage basis.
According to Nacha, the organization that governs the ACH network, ACH payments moved over $80 trillion in 2023. The Federal Reserve publishes payment system data showing ACH as one of the primary alternatives to card network processing.
You pull funds from a customer’s bank account. Most common for recurring billing, rent, and dues collection.
You push funds to someone else’s account. Used for payroll, vendor payments, and refunds.
For most merchants, ACH payment processing means ACH debits — collecting payments from customers by pulling directly from their checking or savings account.
ACH Payment Processing Moves Slower Than Cards — On Purpose
The most important thing to understand about ACH payment processing is the timing. Card transactions approve in seconds. ACH transactions settle in 1 to 3 business days. That is not a flaw — it is a reflection of how the network was designed.
If a customer’s account has insufficient funds or they dispute the debit, the return typically comes back within 2 to 5 business days. Unlike a card chargeback — which can arrive weeks or months later — ACH returns resolve quickly.
ACH Payment Processing Makes the Most Sense for These Businesses
ACH is not right for every transaction — but for the right businesses, it is dramatically cheaper than card processing. The businesses that benefit most share a few characteristics: large average ticket size, recurring or predictable payment schedules, and customers who are businesses or institutions rather than random consumers.
Rent collection is the clearest use case. High ticket amounts, monthly recurring schedule, no impulse purchase dynamic. The property management company in this post saves over $75,000 per year by switching rent collection to ACH.
Law firms, accounting firms, consultants, and contractors billing clients for invoices of $2,000, $5,000, or $20,000 have no business paying 2.6% + $0.30 on those transactions. ACH payment processing brings that cost to under a dollar per invoice.
Insurance reimbursements, patient payment plans, and recurring billing for ongoing care are all natural fits. See healthcare merchant services for how practices structure payment acceptance.
SaaS companies, membership organizations, gyms, and any business with predictable recurring revenue can use ACH debits to collect monthly or annual payments at a fraction of card processing costs — especially for annual plans where a single large transaction would otherwise cost $50 or more in card fees.
Both categories process high-volume, large-ticket payments and have long used ACH as a primary collection method. See government payment processing and utility payment processing for specifics.
ACH vs Card Processing — When Each Makes Sense
ACH payment processing is not a replacement for card processing — it is a complement to it. The right setup for most businesses uses both, routing different transaction types to the lower-cost method.
| Factor | ACH | Card Processing |
|---|---|---|
| Typical cost | $0.20–$1.50 flat | 1.5%–3.5% + per-txn fee |
| Settlement speed | 1–3 business days | Next business day |
| Best for | Large tickets, recurring, B2B | Retail, restaurants, impulse |
| Customer experience | Requires bank info | Instant, familiar |
| Dispute risk | Returns in 2–5 days | Chargebacks up to 120 days |
The decision rule is straightforward: if your customer is standing in front of you and wants to pay right now, use a card. If your customer is paying an invoice, a recurring bill, or a large one-time fee where they can provide bank details in advance, ACH payment processing is almost always the cheaper option.
ACH Has Real Risks — Here Is What Matters
ACH payment processing is not risk-free. Understanding where things can go wrong is part of using it correctly.
You must have explicit written or electronic authorization from your customer before debiting their account. Nacha’s rules are specific — unauthorized ACH debits are a compliance violation, not just a business dispute. Use a proper authorization form and keep records.
Nacha monitors return rates for ACH originators. If your return rate exceeds 15% for administrative returns or 0.5% for unauthorized returns, your processor may restrict or terminate your ACH processing privileges.
Unlike a card decline that happens immediately, an ACH debit can appear to succeed and then return 2 to 5 days later due to insufficient funds. For high-value transactions, bank account verification services can check balance availability before initiating the debit.
Some customers do not have bank accounts. Others are uncomfortable providing bank information. And some simply prefer paying by card for the rewards points. Forcing ACH on customers who resist it creates friction that is not worth the fee savings.
Frequently Asked Questions
ACH payment processing moves money directly between bank accounts through the Automated Clearing House network — bypassing card networks entirely. It is commonly used for payroll, recurring billing, B2B payments, and large invoice payments where the flat transaction cost makes it far cheaper than card processing on high-dollar amounts.
Standard ACH transfers settle in 1–3 business days. Same-day ACH is available for an additional fee and settles within the same business day if submitted before the network cutoff. The slower settlement compared to cards is the primary tradeoff for the lower cost.
ACH makes the most sense for high-dollar transactions — invoices over $500, recurring subscription payments, rent collection, and B2B payments. At $5,000, ACH costs $1–$5 versus $100–$150 for card processing. The savings are significant enough that many property managers, contractors, and B2B businesses route large payments through ACH and reserve card acceptance for smaller transactions.
More on transparent pricing and statement reading
Your Invoices Are Running Through Card Networks. They Do Not Have To.
The property management company in this post was paying $6,580 a month in processing fees. After switching to ACH: under $200. If you are collecting recurring payments, large invoices, or B2B payments by card, send us your last processing statement and we will show you the same math on your volume. The number is usually significant enough to act on immediately.
Request a Free Statement ReviewNo obligation • No pressure • Response within one business day