Selling globally on Shopify is not just about enabling card payments. Customers in different markets expect different ways to pay: cards and Shop Pay in North America, iDEAL and Bancontact in parts of Europe, Alipay and WeChat Pay for Chinese consumers, GCash and GrabPay in Southeast Asia, PIX in Brazil, UPI in India, and mobile wallets across many emerging markets.
For Shopify merchants, the payment question is usually practical: should you use Shopify Payments, add a third-party provider, localize payment methods by region, or combine several options? The answer depends on where your store is registered, where your customers are located, which local payment methods matter, how fees are charged, and how many payment operations you want to manage manually.
This guide explains how global payment methods work on Shopify, how to compare Shopify Payments with third-party providers, which payment methods to prioritize by region, and how Antom can help international Shopify stores accept localized payment methods with a more scalable setup.
A global Shopify payment setup should do more than process transactions. It should help the store increase checkout conversion, reduce payment failures, keep costs predictable, and make settlement and reconciliation manageable across regions.
|
Need |
Why it matters for Shopify merchants |
What to check |
|
Local payment methods |
Customers often abandon checkout when their preferred payment method is missing. |
Wallets, cards, bank transfers, BNPL, QR, and real-time payments. |
|
Market eligibility |
Shopify Payments availability depends on merchant location, business type, and documentation. |
Supported countries, business verification, and prohibited categories. |
|
Fee visibility |
Third-party provider fees, Shopify transaction fees, card rates, and FX can stack. |
Shopify plan, provider pricing, currency conversion, and refund policy. |
|
Checkout experience |
Redirects, unfamiliar methods, or currency friction can hurt conversion. |
Direct checkout, mobile UX, local currency, trust signals. |
|
Risk and disputes |
Cross-border orders may carry higher fraud and chargeback complexity. |
Risk tools, dispute handling, refund workflow, and dashboard visibility. |
|
Settlement and reconciliation |
International growth increases finance workload. |
Settlement cycle, currencies, payout reports, refunds, and chargeback matching. |
Shopify Payments vs Third-Party Providers vs Local Payment Extensions
Shopify merchants usually have three payment routes. The best setup is often a combination rather than a single provider.
|
Setup option |
Best for |
Advantages |
Limitations |
|
Shopify Payments |
Stores eligible in supported Shopify Payments countries and selling mainly into card-led markets. |
Native Shopify setup, real-time payout visibility in Shopify admin, no additional third-party transaction fees on Shopify Payments orders. |
Not available for every merchant location or business category; local payment method coverage may not be enough for every international market. |
|
Third-party payment provider |
Stores that are not eligible for Shopify Payments or need specific provider coverage. |
Can extend geographic reach and specialized payment capabilities. |
Shopify third-party transaction fees may apply; customer may experience redirects depending on provider type. |
|
Localized payment method provider / plugin |
Stores targeting regions where wallets, real-time payments, BNPL, or online banking matter. |
Improves local relevance and conversion; can reduce dependence on cards in wallet-first markets. |
Requires method selection, compliance review, settlement/reconciliation setup, and fee analysis. |
How Shopify Third-Party Fees Affect the Decision
Fees are one of the biggest reasons merchants compare payment setups. Shopify explains that third-party transaction fees apply when merchants use third-party payment providers, and that transaction fees vary by plan. Shopify also states that when Shopify Payments is available, merchants pay the credit card rate without additional third-party transaction fees for Shopify Payments orders, while third-party providers charge their own rates separately.
|
Cost layer |
Where it comes from |
Merchant action |
|
Shopify plan / card rate |
Shopify subscription and card-processing pricing. |
Check current Shopify pricing for your country and plan. |
|
Third-party transaction fee |
Shopify fee for using external payment providers in applicable cases. |
Model this fee before adding a provider. |
|
Provider processing fee |
The payment provider’s own pricing. |
Compare total cost, not only headline percentage. |
|
FX and cross-border cost |
Currency conversion, international card classification, settlement currency. |
Decide pricing currency and settlement currency intentionally. |
|
Refund / dispute cost |
Payment fees may not always be returned after refunds; disputes create operational cost. |
Include refunds, chargebacks, and dispute handling in payment ROI. |
Decision Tree: Which Shopify Payment Setup Should You Use?
The table below gives a practical payment-method map for international Shopify stores. Use it as a starting point, then validate availability by merchant location, customer country, product category, and provider integration.
|
Region/market |
Customer payment behavior |
Priority payment methods for Shopify |
Antom relevance |
|
North America |
Card-led, with strong express wallet adoption. |
Cards, Shop Pay, Apple Pay, Google Pay, PayPal. |
Antom can support card acceptance in supported Shopify plugin regions and broader payment operations for eligible merchants. |
|
UK and Europe |
Cards remain important, but local methods vary by country. |
Cards, Apple Pay, Google Pay, PayPal, iDEAL, Bancontact, Klarna, local bank methods where relevant. |
Useful for merchants that need card acquiring and localized payment operations across eligible regions. |
|
China / Chinese shoppers |
Wallet-led consumer behavior. |
Alipay, WeChat Pay, UnionPay-related card/payment flows where available. |
Antom is especially relevant for Asian wallet and local payment method coverage. |
|
Southeast Asia |
Wallet, QR, real-time payment, and online banking are often critical. |
GCash, GrabPay, GoPay, TrueMoney, Touch n Go, PromptPay, QRIS, PayNow, online banking, BNPL where relevant. |
Strong fit for merchants targeting APAC local wallets, BNPL, online banking, and real-time payments. |
|
Japan and Korea |
Cards are strong, but local wallets and convenience flows can matter. |
Cards, PayPay, Rakuten Pay, KakaoPay, Naver Pay, local cards, installment options. |
Consider Antom/local methods where payment preference differs from card-only checkout. |
|
Latin America |
Cards, installments, local wallets, and A2A rails vary by market. |
PIX, Mercado Pago, local cards, OXXO/cash-based methods, installment payments. |
Validate method availability carefully; use a provider that supports local rails and settlement requirements. |
|
India |
UPI and local digital payment methods dominate many online flows. |
UPI, PhonePe, Google Pay, Paytm, netbanking, cards. |
Use local providers for India-specific rails if needed; Antom strategy can still guide regional payment localization. |
|
Middle East |
Cards, wallets, and local payment preferences differ by country. |
Cards, Apple Pay, local wallets, bank transfer or installment methods where relevant. |
Use market-by-market payment selection rather than a single global default. |
When Antom Makes Sense for a Shopify Store
Antom is most relevant when a Shopify merchant wants to grow beyond a simple card checkout and needs localized payment methods, cross-border acquiring, operational support, and a more scalable way to manage international payments.
|
Antom capability |
What it means for Shopify merchants |
|
Shopify plugin |
Merchants can integrate through the Antom plugin for Shopify with minimal setup rather than building a custom payment integration. |
|
Localized payment methods |
Antom can help merchants accept widely used digital wallets and other local payment methods in supported markets. |
|
Card payment solution |
Antom’s Shopify documentation lists card support for Hong Kong SAR (China), Singapore, the United States, the European Union, and the United Kingdom, with specific card brands varying by region. |
|
Alternative payment methods |
Antom Payments for Shopify supports categories such as digital wallets, BNPL, online banking, and real-time payments for Hong Kong SAR (China) and Singapore. |
|
Operational dashboard |
Antom documentation notes that merchants can manage orders, settlements, reconciliation, refunds, and risk control via the Antom Dashboard. |
|
Merchant onboarding |
Antom documentation states that merchants can activate the plugin in Shopify admin and complete onboarding and payment method activation without development or SDK integration. |
|
Payment strategy area |
Recommended approach |
|
Pricing currency |
Show prices in the customer’s local currency where possible. Avoid forcing customers to mentally convert USD prices. |
|
Local rounding |
Use market-native price endings and rounded amounts instead of directly converted amounts that look unfamiliar. |
|
Payment method display |
Prioritize the most relevant local methods at checkout rather than overwhelming customers with every method. |
|
Settlement currency |
Decide whether to settle in the store’s base currency or keep balances in local currencies depending on FX exposure and finance workflow. |
|
Tax and duties |
Make taxes, duties, and shipping costs clear before payment. Unexpected costs reduce conversion. |
|
Reporting |
Make sure transaction, settlement, refund, and dispute records can be matched across markets. |
|
Business type |
Payment setup priority |
Recommended content angle |
|
DTC e-commerce brand |
Cards + express checkout + local wallets in priority regions. |
Focus on conversion, local trust, and regional payment preferences. |
|
Cross-border seller targeting APAC |
Cards plus digital wallets, BNPL, online banking, and real-time payment methods where available. |
Use Antom as a localized payment method and operational layer. |
|
Digital goods / subscriptions |
Cards, wallets, tokenized payments, recurring support, fraud controls. |
Prioritize authorization rates, recurring payment reliability, and risk control. |
|
Marketplace-style store |
Multiple payment methods, clear settlement reporting, refund and dispute workflows. |
Emphasize payment operations and reconciliation. |
|
High-ticket retail |
Cards, wallets, BNPL/installments where suitable, stronger fraud screening. |
Balance conversion with fraud and chargeback protection. |
|
B2B Shopify store |
Cards, bank transfer/manual methods, invoice-like workflows, settlement visibility. |
Optimize for reconciliation, payment confirmation, and enterprise buyer expectations. |
|
Mistake |
Why it hurts |
Better approach |
|
Using card-only checkout globally |
Card penetration and trust vary widely by market. |
Add local wallets, A2A, real-time payments, or BNPL where customer behavior demands it. |
|
Ignoring Shopify third-party fees |
Provider pricing may look attractive until Shopify transaction fees and FX are added. |
Model total cost before adding a new provider. |
|
Listing every payment method |
Too many options can confuse customers. |
Prioritize methods based on customer location and payment preference. |
|
Treating Shopify Markets as a full payment strategy |
Markets localizes selling, but payment acceptance still needs method-level decisions. |
Pair local pricing with local payment methods. |
|
No settlement plan |
International growth can create reconciliation issues. |
Choose providers and dashboards that support settlement and refund visibility. |
|
No risk strategy |
New markets may bring new fraud patterns. |
Use payment risk controls and monitor chargebacks by region and method. |
Yes. Shopify can support international selling through Shopify Payments in supported countries and through third-party payment providers. Merchant eligibility, accepted payment methods, payout details, and verification requirements vary by country and business type.
There is no single best method globally. Card-led markets need cards and express wallets; wallet-first markets need local digital wallets; A2A markets may need bank or real-time payment methods; high-ticket retail may benefit from BNPL or installment options.
Use Shopify Payments when you are eligible, and it covers your main customer markets. Add a third-party or localized provider when you need payment methods, regions, settlement options, or risk capabilities that Shopify Payments alone does not cover.
Shopify states that third-party transaction fees apply when using third-party payment providers, and the fee varies depending on the Shopify plan. Merchants should verify current fees in Shopify’s official pricing and payment documentation.
Availability depends on the payment provider, merchant location, buyer country, and integration. Antom can help eligible Shopify merchants offer localized payment methods in supported regions.
Yes. Antom provides a Shopify plugin and documentation for Shopify integration. Antom describes its Shopify solution as supporting localized payment solutions, cards in supported regions, and alternative payment method categories such as digital wallets, BNPL, online banking, and real-time payment in specific markets.
Start with customer behavior in each market, then check provider availability and fees. Prioritize the few methods most likely to improve conversion, then test performance by authorization rate, payment success rate, checkout completion, refunds, and disputes.
Shopify Markets helps with international selling, localization, and currency display, but payment method coverage still depends on the payment providers and methods you activate. The best setup usually combines local pricing with local payment methods.