Migrazione

Migrazione del gateway di pagamento

Il cambio di gateway di pagamento richiede un'attenta pianificazione per evitare interruzioni del servizio e mantenere il flusso delle transazioni.

Cardflo è specializzata nella migrazione di gateway di pagamento, fornendo un approccio strutturato che garantisce l'integrità dei dati, la compatibilità del sistema e l'accettazione continua dei pagamenti per la tua attività. Gestiamo le complessità tecniche e operative.

Categoria
Migrazione
Funzionalità
10
Disponibile su
Tutti i piani
Richiedi ora

La panoramica

Payment gateway migration describes the process of transitioning a merchant's transaction processing and cardholder data environment from one service provider to another.

This procedure is typically driven by a requirement for lower interchange plus costs, improved authorisation rates, or access to specific alternative payment methods not supported by the incumbent.

The migration sits between the merchant's checkout layer and the acquirer, necessitates the secure transfer of sensitive data, and requires rigorous mapping of Merchant Category Codes and terminal configurations.

Success in this area relies on maintaining PCI DSS compliance while moving vaulted credentials, ensuring that recurring billing remains uninterrupted. A technical transition must account for differing API structures, webhooks, and reporting formats to prevent reconciliation gaps during the switch.

If managed incorrectly, a migration can lead to elevated decline rates or the loss of tokenised payment methods, directly impacting customer lifetime value and operational stability.

Come funziona

  1. Technical audit and documentation

    The process commences with an analysis of the existing API integrations and transaction flows. Engineering teams identify all touchpoints, including checkout pages, mobile applications, and backend server-to-server calls.

    This stage defines the requirements for the new gateway, ensuring that all existing functionality is mapped correctly to the new provider's technical specifications.

  2. Token migration and vaulting

    Moving stored card data is the most critical phase for subscription-based businesses. The incumbent gateway must export cardholder data in a secure, PCI-compliant format, typically via an SFTP transfer directly to the new gateway's vault.

    This allows for the recreation of tokens without requiring the customer to re-enter their details.

  3. Integration and configuration

    Developers implement the new gateway's SDKs or APIs while configuring essential settings such as 3D Secure rules, fraud velocity checks, and soft descriptor formats.

    This phase often involves setting up a secondary Merchant Identification Number (MID) to facilitate parallel testing before the primary traffic is rerouted to the new environment.

  4. Shadow testing and cutover

    Before the full transition, merchants often conduct shadow testing where a small percentage of traffic is sent to the new gateway. This allows for an analysis of authorisation responses and potential soft declines.

    Once the new system demonstrates stability and expected success rates, the final cutover occurs and the old gateway is decommissioned.

Perché è importante

Operational continuity and retention

Inadequate migration planning can lead to the loss of stored payment credentials, forcing customers to manually update their card information. Industry data suggests that requiring re-entry of data significantly increases churn for recurring revenue models.

A managed migration preserves these tokens, ensuring that automated billing cycles continue without friction, maintaining the stability of the merchant's cash flow during the transition.

Authorisation rate optimisation

Gateway migration is often a strategic move to improve the ratio of successful transactions. Different gateways have varying levels of connectivity with regional acquirers and issuers.

By moving to a provider with better direct integrations or smarter routing logic, a business can reduce the frequency of false declines and technical errors, directly increasing the total volume of processed revenue.

Casi d'uso

International market expansion

A merchant scaling into Europe may migrate to a gateway with better support for local schemes like Cartes Bancaires or iDEAL. This ensures higher conversion by offering preferred local payment methods.

Consolidating multiple platforms

Enterprises operating several disparate brands often migrate to a single gateway to centralise reporting and unify their Merchant Category Code management. This simplifies cross-brand financial reconciliation and treasury operations.

Reducing processing overheads

Businesses facing high scheme fees or unfavourable blended pricing may migrate to a gateway that supports interchange-plus-plus models. This allows for greater transparency and cost control over every individual transaction.

In cifre

2-5%
Authorisation improvement

This range reflects typical gains observed when migrating to providers with more sophisticated routing or local acquiring capabilities, depending on the merchant's specific geographic footprint.

4-12 weeks
Migration duration

This is a standard industry timeframe for mid-market to enterprise migrations, spanning from the initial technical discovery phase to the final decommissioning of the legacy system.

>99%
Token transfer success

High-integrity migrations between PCI Level 1 providers generally achieve near-total data preservation, though minor discrepancies can occur due to card expiry or data format mismatches.

Ready to route with Migrazione del gateway di pagamento?

Talk to our team about a live rollout on your acquiring stack.

Richiedi ora

Cosa ottieni con Migrazione del gateway di pagamento

  • Valutare l'infrastruttura del gateway attuale e identificare i requisiti di migrazione.
  • Pianificare ed eseguire il trasferimento dei dati, inclusi i dettagli delle carte tokenizzate.
  • Integrare le nuove API del gateway con le piattaforme di e-commerce esistenti.
  • Coordinare le fasi di test per garantire la piena funzionalità e sicurezza.
  • Minimizzare le interruzioni aziendali e mantenere la continuità delle transazioni.
  • Fornire formazione e supporto al tuo team sul nuovo gateway.
  • Strategic testing of authorisation response codes to identify potential issuer-side refusals early.
  • Verification of refund and dispute management workflows within the new gateway interface.
  • Coordination with acquirers to ensure underlying MID set-ups are optimised for the new gateway.
  • Establishing fallback mechanisms to revert traffic in the event of unforeseen integration failures.
See Migrazione del gateway di pagamento on your acquiring stack.

A short scoping call, then a written plan for your MIDs.

Richiedi ora

Domande su Migrazione del gateway di pagamento

Quali sono le sfide comuni nella migrazione del gateway di pagamento?

Le sfide comuni includono la garanzia della sicurezza dei dati durante il trasferimento, il mantenimento dell'uptime, l'integrazione di nuove API con i sistemi esistenti e la gestione dei dati delle carte tokenizzate.

Cardflo affronta queste sfide attraverso una pianificazione meticolosa e un'esecuzione tecnica esperta, mitigando i rischi.

Come gestisce Cardflo i dati delle carte tokenizzate durante la migrazione?

Cardflo impiega metodi sicuri e conformi per la gestione dei dati delle carte tokenizzate durante la migrazione.

Facilitiamo il trasferimento di token o i processi di ritokenizzazione in conformità agli standard PCI DSS, assicurando che i dati delle carte dei clienti rimangano sicuri e accessibili per le transazioni ricorrenti.

Ci sarà un tempo di inattività durante la migrazione del gateway di pagamento?

Cardflo mira a minimizzare o eliminare i tempi di inattività durante la migrazione del gateway di pagamento. Implementiamo transizioni graduali e robuste strategie di test per garantire che l'elaborazione dei pagamenti rimanga operativa durante l'intero processo, prevenendo perdite di vendite o insoddisfazione del cliente.

Can I use multiple gateways simultaneously during the migration period?

Yes, this is often recommended and is a core component of payment orchestration. By running two gateways in parallel, merchants can perform A/B testing on authorisation rates and provide a failover option if the new integration encounters issues.

This redundant setup, often managed through a smart-routing layer, ensures that there is no single point of failure and allows for a more controlled, data-driven transition rather than a high-risk 'big bang' cutover.

How do I handle recurring payments that are mid-cycle during a migration?

Managing mid-cycle subscriptions requires careful synchronisation of the dunning logic and billing engine. The common practice is to keep the old gateway active for a transition period to handle any pending settlements or disputes.

New billing cycles are then initiated through the new gateway using the migrated tokens. It is essential to ensure that the billing engine receives real-time updates from both sources during the overlap to avoid double-charging or missed payments.

Is a new Merchant Identification Number (MID) always required when changing gateways?

Not necessarily, but it depends on the relationship between the gateway and the acquirer. If you are using a gateway-agnostic acquirer, you may be able to point your existing MID to the new gateway.

However, if you are moving to a full-stack PSP where the gateway and acquirer are bundled, a new MID will be issued.

In many cases, merchants apply for a new MID to ensure a clean slate for performance tracking and to avoid any configuration conflicts with the legacy setup.

Inizia

Pronto per la velocità?

Raccontaci della tua attività. Ti abbineremo ai giusti partner acquirenti e al percorso giusto, di solito entro una settimana.

Richiedi ora
Richiedi ora