As digital commerce expands, businesses need payment solutions that combine security, flexibility, and brand consistency. White-label payment gateways have emerged as a powerful way to offer seamless, branded payment experiences without building systems from scratch. Valued at USD 2.29 billion in 2024, the market is growing rapidly as companies look for multi-currency, customisable solutions that keep pace with global e-commerce.
A white-label payment gateway is a payment solution built by a third-party provider that businesses can brand and customise as their own. It lets you offer customers a secure, fully branded payment experience while the provider handles the technology, security, and compliance behind the scenes.
This means merchants can support multiple payment methods—from credit cards to digital wallets—without investing in complex infrastructure. It delivers the functionality of a full payment processor while keeping your brand front and centre.
White-label payment gateways follow the same process as traditional payment systems but add a branding and management layer:
White-label payment gateways |
Traditional payment gateways |
|
Branding |
Full brand control across the payment process |
Limited to provider’s brand and interface |
Customisation |
Customisable UI, features, and workflows |
Fixed templates and layouts |
Multiple currencies |
Supports global payments and multiple currencies |
Often limited or requires multiple providers |
Compliance & security |
Managed by gateway provider, ensuring updated standards |
Merchant may need to add extra compliance layers |
Onboarding |
Faster, as the infrastructure is ready-made |
Slower, may involve lengthy approvals |
Cost model |
Cost-effective for scale, especially with local acquiring |
Higher processing fees, especially for cross-border |
Businesses can brand the checkout page with their logos, colour schemes, and UI preferences, ensuring customers have a consistent experience. Beyond visual design, some providers allow tailored workflows, custom payment fields, and different checkout styles depending on customer segments or regions.
These gateways enable merchants to accept payments in multiple currencies, helping businesses expand into global markets and cater to international customers. Settlement can often be made in the merchant’s preferred currency, which simplifies accounting and reduces conversion costs.
Gateways typically support credit cards, e-wallets, buy-now-pay-later options, and local payment methods through a single integration. Businesses can enter new markets and serve different customer preferences without developing separate payment connections for each method.
Encryption, tokenisation, and AI-driven checks secure transactions while PCI DSS and local regulatory requirements are handled by the provider. Merchants don’t need to build their own fraud systems or constantly update processes to stay compliant.
Comprehensive APIs, SDKs, plug-ins, and webhooks make it easier to connect payment systems with existing platforms. Development teams can integrate faster, roll out new payment flows sooner, and reduce maintenance overhead.
Most white-label gateways provide dashboards for monitoring transactions, reconciling settlements, and analysing performance. Advanced reporting often includes insights into authorisation rates, declined transactions, chargebacks, and geographic performance, which can guide better business decisions.
When choosing a white-label payment gateway, decision-makers should evaluate the following:
Question |
What to expect |
What level of customisation is available? |
Look for options to brand checkout flows, add your logo, adjust UI, and support multiple integration modes. |
How do you manage compliance and fraud detection? |
Expect details on PCI DSS certification, encryption, fraud monitoring tools, and regular updates. |
Which regions and currencies are supported? |
Providers should list supported countries, acquirers, and settlement currencies to match your expansion plans. |
What are the costs and settlement timelines? |
Transparent pricing, competitive transaction fees, and clear settlement schedules (daily, weekly, or monthly). |
How do you handle technical support and updates? |
24/7 customer support, dedicated account management, and regular platform updates to maintain reliability. |
More businesses are turning to white-label payment gateways to power their growth. They offer the mix of branding control, flexibility, and infrastructure that modern commerce demands. Today, 65% of SMEs use these gateways, and more than half rely on them to expand globally. Antom plays a key role in this evolution, giving companies the tools to scale confidently and deliver seamless payment experiences across markets.