Payment processing is the behind-the-scenes sequence that lets you accept and receive money from your customers. Whether you're running a café, a clothing boutique or a service business, seamless payment acceptance helps keep your operations flowing and your customers coming back.
You may accept payments in person, online or via mobile devices. Each of these methods connects your customer to your business through a series of secure, timed steps. Smooth payment experiences can mean the difference between a sale completed and one abandoned.
Every payment starts when a customer initiates a purchase. From that moment, the transaction flows through a structured path:
Each step is designed to be fast, secure, and accurate, reducing the chance of errors while maintaining a smooth customer experience.
Several entities work together to complete each transaction:
There are a few common ways small businesses can set up payment processing. Each one varies in setup effort, cost structure, and how much control or flexibility it offers. Here's a simplified comparison to help you assess what might suit your needs best:
Option |
Description |
Best for |
Pros |
Cons |
Traditional merchant accounts |
Accounts set up through banks or specialist providers that handle card payments directly. |
More established or high-volume businesses |
Tailored rates, control over payments |
More paperwork, slower to set up, longer contracts |
Payment service providers (PSPs) |
Services that bundle everything—gateway, processor, and merchant account—in one platform. |
Businesses of any size, from small to large enterprise. |
Quick onboarding, scalable solutions, full API/SDK and platform integrations |
May require choosing between custom vs. out-of-the-box setups depending on business needs |
Bank merchant services |
Payment products offered by your business bank. |
Businesses that want everything under one roof |
Familiar provider, account integration |
May lack modern ecommerce or support features |
Virtual terminals |
Online tools that let you enter card payments manually via a web browser. |
Remote services, phone orders |
No hardware needed, works anywhere |
Slower process, higher risk of input error |
Small businesses today accept payments in a variety of ways. The setup you choose depends on how and where your customers buy from you; face to face, over the phone, or through your website.
These are face-to-face transactions, typically processed using:
This setup is popular with cafés, retail shops, and mobile vendors who need quick and reliable in-store payment acceptance.
Online transactions take place through your website or app. These include:
Recurring billing, such as subscription models or auto debit, also falls into this category and is ideal for memberships or regular service fees.
Customers can also pay using:
These flexible options help small businesses serve customers wherever they are—without the need for expensive hardware or complex integrations.
Costs can vary depending on the type of setup you choose, the payment methods you offer, and how your customers pay. While every business is different, here are the common cost components small businesses are likely to encounter:
Most providers charge per transaction. This fee often includes a percentage of the sale and a fixed fee per transaction:
Different providers use different fee structures:
In addition to per-transaction costs, you might encounter:
Some providers roll these into a single monthly rate, while others itemise each one. Always ask for a full breakdown in writing.
Your actual costs will depend on the tools you use, the volume and value of your sales, the types of payment methods you support, and the level of service you need. While there’s no one-size-fits-all number, understanding these categories will help you compare providers with confidence. We’ve written more about payment gateway fees here.
Your payment setup depends on how you serve your customers, i.e. in person, online, or remotely. The right mix of tools can help you take payments efficiently and reduce friction at checkout. Here's a simple comparison of the main options:
Hardware or Software Tool |
Use Case |
Best for |
Advantages |
Considerations |
POS terminals |
Physical systems for in-store transactions |
Retail shops, cafés |
Full-featured, inventory and receipt support |
Higher upfront cost, space required |
Mobile readers |
Portable card readers linked to a phone/tablet |
Food trucks, market stalls, mobile services |
Affordable, easy to move, tap-to-pay enabled |
Needs mobile device and internet |
Virtual terminals |
Manual entry via browser |
Remote services, phone bookings |
No hardware needed, works on any desktop |
Slower entry, more fraud risk |
QR code payments |
Customer scans to pay |
Contactless, quick-pay scenarios |
No hardware, good for promotions and displays |
Requires customer smartphone |
Embedded checkout tools |
Integrated in your website or app |
Ecommerce and bookings |
Seamless user experience, can boost conversions |
May require technical setup or platform support |
The right provider should work with tools you already use, from your ecommerce platform to accounting or booking software. Many small businesses benefit from providers offering plug-ins for platforms like Shopify, WooCommerce or Xero, or APIs and SDKs for more sophisticated setups.
Today’s consumers choose convenience, familiarity, and speed. If your business doesn’t support the methods your customers prefer, you risk losing sales at the final step.
Most small businesses start by accepting major credit and debit cards such as Visa, Mastercard, and American Express. But many customers also expect to use mobile wallets like GrabPay, PayPay, GCash, or Alipay+.
Contactless payments are increasingly common, especially for low-value, in-person purchases. QR code payments and tap-to-pay functionality add speed and reduce friction. For online transactions, saved card details, one-click checkout, and secure redirects improve the user experience.
As digital payments evolve, it's also helpful to support bank transfers, buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) options, or country-specific e-wallets if your audience demands it.
If you serve international customers consider accepting multiple currencies and local payment methods. Multi-currency pricing allows buyers to see prices and pay in their home currency, which can boost trust and reduce cart abandonment.
Many payment providers offer currency conversion and settlement features that simplify this process for small businesses, letting you expand into new markets without building separate infrastructure for each one.
Look for transparent pricing, scalability, responsive support, and availability of preferred payment methods. Ask about uptime guarantees, onboarding speed and dispute handling.
PCI DSS is a security standard required for handling cardholder data. Tokenisation replaces sensitive data with encrypted tokens, making it harder for criminals to exploit. Antom handles tokenisation and secure APIs on your behalf.
Chargebacks can be time-consuming. A provider with clear dispute resolution processes and fraud monitoring can help reduce losses and save time.