Understanding Pricing Models & Fee Structures: Flat-Rate, Interchange-Plus, and Tiered Explained (with examples)

Overview
Processing fees materially impact margins. The main pricing structures are flat-rate (blended), interchange-plus, and tiered (bundled). Understanding how they work will help you choose the lowest-cost option for your business.

The three models, explained

  • Flat-Rate (Blended): A single percentage + per-transaction fee for all transactions (for example, 2.9% + $0.30). Simple and predictable for low-volume merchants. Merchant Maverick

  • Interchange-Plus (Pass-Through): Merchant pays the actual interchange (set by card networks) + a disclosed processor markup. Most transparent and typically cheapest at higher volumes. Merchant Maverick

  • Tiered (Bundled): Transactions are bucketed into “qualified,” “mid-qualified,” and “non-qualified” with different blended rates. Processors often keep some spread; this model can hide costs and is less transparent. Stax Payments

Side-by-side comparison table

Feature Flat-Rate Interchange-Plus Tiered
Transparency High (simple) Very high (line-item) Low (processor decides tiers)
Best for Low/seasonal volume High/consistent volume Often small businesses unaware of alternatives
Typical cost behavior Can be expensive at scale Cheapest at scale Variable; often higher than interchange-plus
Complexity Low Higher (needs statement parsing) Low

Worked example — why interchange-plus can beat flat-rate at scale

Assume 1,000 transactions at an average sale of $20:
Step 1 — total sales: 1,000 × $20 = $20,000.
Flat-rate example: 2.9% + $0.30

  1. Percentage fee: 0.029 × $20,000 = $580.00.

  2. Per-transaction fee: $0.30 × 1,000 = $300.00.

  3. Total flat fees = $580.00 + $300.00 = $880.00.

  4. Effective flat rate = $880 / $20,000 = 0.044 = 4.4%.

Interchange-plus example (sample numbers): assume average interchange of 1.70% + $0.10, processor markup 0.25% + $0.05.

  1. Interchange percent: 0.017 × $20,000 = $340.00.

  2. Interchange fixed: $0.10 × 1,000 = $100.00.

  3. Processor percent markup: 0.0025 × $20,000 = $50.00.

  4. Processor fixed markup: $0.05 × 1,000 = $50.00.

  5. Total interchange-plus fees = $340 + $100 + $50 + $50 = $540.00.

  6. Effective interchange-plus rate = $540 / $20,000 = 0.027 = 2.7%.

This example shows interchange-plus can produce significantly lower costs for higher volumes, which is consistent with industry analysis. Exact savings depend on card mix, MCC, and transaction types. Merchant Maverick+1

Common hidden fees to watch for

  • Monthly gateway fees, PCI compliance service fees, statement fees, chargeback fees, early termination charges, and equipment rental. Transparency varies by provider—pass-through pricing shows line items, while flat/tiered often bury extras. Industry guides consistently recommend asking for a sample statement to audit fees. Fidelity Bank+1

How to choose for your business

  1. Estimate monthly volume and average ticket.

  2. Ask providers for an itemized statement with interchange line items.

  3. Request a sample comparison using your real volumes and card mix (many independent marketplaces help with this).

  4. If you’re small/seasonal, flat-rate’s simplicity may be best. If you’re growing, interchange-plus usually wins long-term. NerdWallet+1

Where Bay State helps

We audit sample statements and run a side-by-side cost model using your real transaction data to recommend the right pricing structure. For an in-depth guide on selecting the best processor for small business, see: The Best Credit Card Processing Company for Small Businesses.

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