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Corner-store owner at his counter beside an old register, holding the inherited merchant contract left behind by the previous owner
What Came With the Keys

Rafael Took Over the Store on a Monday

The inherited merchant contract that came with Rafael Mejia’s corner store wasn’t one he ever sat down and signed. He bought the market in Lawrence, Massachusetts from a man who had run it for twenty-two years and was finally retiring. The deal was for the shelves, the coolers, the lease on the building, the goodwill of a neighborhood that had shopped there since before Rafael’s kids were born. The card terminal sitting next to the register was just part of the furniture, the way the bell on the door was part of the furniture.

The week he took over, a sales rep from the previous owner’s processor stopped by. Friendly, quick. He slid a single form across the counter and said it was just to keep the card machine switched on under the new ownership. Rafael was unpacking inventory and learning where the light switches were. He signed it. That signature, it turned out, started a brand-new thirty-six-month agreement on a tiered-rate account and put Rafael on the hook for the rest of a forty-eight-month lease on the same terminal the old owner had been renting for years.

Reading the First Statement

The Numbers Showed Up Three Months Later

Rafael does about $31,000 a month in card volume — small tickets, lots of them, the way a neighborhood grocery runs. He didn’t think much about processing until his bookkeeper flagged the effective rate on his March statement: just under 3.9%. On $31,000 a month, that’s more than $1,200 going to card fees, and a chunk of it had nothing to do with the cost of the cards themselves — the inherited merchant contract he’d signed at the counter was quietly doing the rest.

Two line items did the damage. The first was tiered pricing — the account groups his transactions into “qualified,” “mid-qualified,” and “non-qualified” buckets, and most of his keyed and rewards-card sales landed in the expensive buckets where the markup hides. The second was an $89 monthly terminal lease, the previous owner’s lease, now Rafael’s, with more than three years still to run and a personal guarantee attached. There was also an early termination fee — a little under $600 — waiting if he tried to walk away.

The trap

When you buy a small business, the card setup often comes with it — and the friendliest-looking form at the handoff can quietly start a fresh multi-year commitment. Rafael signed something, but he never chose the tiered rate, the lease, or the termination fee. He inherited them.

Why This Keeps Happening

The Three Things New Owners Inherit

Rafael’s situation is ordinary, not unusual. When a business changes hands, the payment processing rarely gets a second look — the buyer is focused on rent, inventory, payroll, and keeping the doors open. The processor’s rep knows this, and the handoff is the perfect moment to lock in a buyer who isn’t reading closely. An inherited merchant contract almost always carries some combination of three things.

What to check the week you take over
  • A tiered-rate account. Tiered pricing buries the processor’s markup inside the non-qualified bucket, so your effective rate climbs without any single fee looking alarming.
  • An equipment lease. A terminal lease is a separate finance contract — often non-cancelable, often with a personal guarantee, frequently outliving the hardware’s usefulness by years.
  • An auto-renewing agreement with an early termination fee. The merchant agreement renews on its own and charges you to leave, so “I’ll just switch later” turns into a $400-to-$900 problem.

Here’s the part most new owners don’t realize: how you bought the business changes what you’re actually bound to. If you did an asset purchase — you bought the inventory, fixtures, and goodwill, not the legal entity — the seller’s merchant agreement does not automatically become yours. You usually have to open your own account, which means you have room to choose better terms instead of adopting the old ones by default. If you bought the entity itself, the contracts more often carry over intact. The distinction is worth knowing before you assume you’re stuck. The U.S. Small Business Administration’s guide to buying an existing business walks through exactly the kind of contracts and leases that should get reviewed before, not after, the keys change hands.

What You Can Still Do

An Inherited Merchant Contract Isn’t a Life Sentence

Rafael felt cornered when he saw the numbers, but an inherited merchant contract leaves more room than the rep had let on. The first step was simply finding out what he was actually bound to — not what the statement implied, but what the agreement and the lease said in writing. Once that was clear, the path opened up.

The tiered-rate account could be replaced with interchange-plus pricing, where the wholesale cost set by the card networks is passed through and the processor’s markup is a single, visible number — no qualified-versus-non-qualified games. The terminal lease and the early termination fee are real costs, but they are also math: in plenty of cases the monthly savings from leaving a bad rate covers a lease buyout or an ETF inside a year, which turns “I’m trapped” into a dated decision with a break-even. And because Rafael had bought the store as an asset purchase, he was never as locked in as the form at the counter made it feel.

The way out

You don’t have to keep an inherited merchant contract just because it came with the building. Pull the agreement and the lease, get the real effective rate in front of you, and run the buyout math. More often than not, the cost of leaving is smaller than the cost of staying another year.

That’s the work Brookside does for owners who took over a business and found someone else’s processing deal waiting for them. We read the contract and the lease so you know exactly what you signed up for, calculate what you’re really paying versus interchange-plus, and tell you whether the escape math works in your favor. No pressure to switch — just a clear picture of an inherited merchant contract you didn’t choose.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

If I bought a business, am I stuck with an inherited merchant contract I never signed?

It depends on how the purchase was structured. In an asset purchase, the seller’s merchant agreement usually does not transfer to you automatically — you open your own account and can choose your own terms. In an entity or stock purchase, the existing contracts more often carry over. Either way, start by reading what’s actually in writing before assuming you’re bound.

Can I get out of a terminal lease the previous owner started?

An equipment lease is a separate, often non-cancelable finance contract, so it usually can’t simply be ended — but it can be bought out, and the buyout cost can be weighed against the savings from leaving a bad processing rate. In many cases the monthly savings cover the buyout within a year, which makes leaving a math problem rather than a dead end.

How do I find out what my inherited account is really costing me?

Pull one recent processing statement and look for the effective rate — total fees divided by total card volume. Tiered-rate accounts hide markup in the non-qualified bucket, so the number is often higher than the rate you were quoted. From there, comparing against interchange-plus pricing shows you how much of what you pay is real cost versus markup you inherited.

Did Your Processing Setup Come With the Business?

Send Us the Contract You Inherited. We’ll Tell You What You’re Actually Bound To.

If you took over a business and the card terminal, the rate, and the lease all came with it, you may have more room than the handoff made it feel. Send Brookside one recent statement and the agreement, and we’ll calculate your real effective rate, read the lease and termination terms, and run the buyout math — about fifteen minutes of work that tells you whether leaving pays for itself. Learn more about payment processing consumer protections from the CFPB.

Send Your Statement for a Free Review

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Kevin wrote this. But if he's wrong, we'll make it right — and demote Kevin to sharpening pencils. BeBetter@brooksidepayments.com