Acquiring

Grensoverschrijdende betalingsverwerking

Stroomlijn uw grensoverschrijdende betalingsverwerking met Cardflo. Ons platform stelt handelaren in staat om efficiënt betalingen van klanten wereldwijd te accepteren.

Wij bieden de infrastructuur voor veilige, conforme en hoogwaardige internationale transacties, waardoor mondiale inkomstenstromen worden geoptimaliseerd.

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Acquiring
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Het overzicht

Cross-border payment processing involves the authorisation, clearing, and settlement of transactions where the merchant and the cardholder are located in different jurisdictions. This process requires navigating complex interactions between international issuers, domestic acquirers, and card schemes.

Unlike domestic transactions, cross-border flows must account for varied interchange structures, currency conversion mechanisms, and diverse regulatory frameworks such as PSD2 in Europe.

A central challenge in this segment is the management of FX risk during the settlement cycle, alongside the technical requirement to handle regional authentication protocols.

Effectively managed cross-border infrastructure allows a merchant to access global markets by routing transactions through appropriate gateways and acquiring partners that support local BIN recognition.

This technical layer is critical for maintaining high authorisation rates, as international transactions are frequently flagged for potential fraud by issuer risk engines unless correctly categorised and authenticated through tools like 3D Secure.

Hoe het werkt

  1. International transaction authorisation request

    When a customer initiates a purchase, the gateway captures the card details and identifies the issuing bank country via the BIN. The request is routed to an acquirer capable of handling international traffic.

    The acquirer communicates with the card scheme to seek authorisation from the issuer in the cardholder's home jurisdiction.

  2. Authentication and risk screening

    The transaction undergoes scrutiny by the issuer's risk engine, often requiring Strong Customer Authentication to satisfy regional mandates.

    The system evaluates the geographic distance between the merchant and the cardholder, alongside typical purchasing behaviour, to determine if the payment carries an elevated risk of fraud or a high dispute probability.

  3. Currency conversion and FX

    If the transaction currency differs from the merchant's settlement currency, a conversion occurs. This can happen at the point of sale via Dynamic Currency Conversion or at the scheme level.

    The exchange rate used is typically tied to the mid-market rate plus a margin applied by the participating banks.

  4. Settlement and fund distribution

    Following successful authorisation, the funds are cleared through the card schemes. The issuer debits the cardholder and transfers funds to the acquirer.

    After deducting interchange, scheme fees, and processing markups, the acquirer settles the remaining balance into the merchant's account, potentially in a pre-agreed secondary currency.

Waarom het telt

Authorisation rate optimisation

Cross-border transactions often face higher decline rates due to issuer suspicion of foreign activity. By utilising sophisticated routing and ensuring correct data transmission, merchants can minimise soft declines.

Localised processing through domestic acquirers in key regions can significantly improve the probability of successful authorisation by making the transaction appear domestic to the issuing bank, thereby avoiding the stringent filters applied to international traffic.

Regulatory and compliance adherence

Operating across borders introduces a diverse range of legal requirements, including AML and KYB protocols that vary by territory. Adhering to these standards is essential to maintain a merchant identification number in good standing.

Failure to comply with regional mandates like SCA in the EEA or specific data residency laws can lead to heavy fines, increased refusal rates, or the loss of processing privileges within those jurisdictions.

Total cost of acceptance

International transactions generally incur higher interchange and scheme fees compared to domestic ones. Effective management of these costs requires an analysis of how transactions are routed and which currencies are favoured for settlement.

By optimising the technical stack to support multi-currency processing, businesses can reduce the impact of FX volatility and minimise the overhead associated with cross-border fee schedules and hidden conversion margins.

Toepassingen

Global e-commerce retail

E-commerce entities selling physical goods to a worldwide audience require the ability to accept local card brands and process payments in the customer's native currency to reduce cart abandonment.

Digital services and SaaS

Subscription-based software providers often have a global user base. They need robust cross-border processing to handle recurring billing across different time zones and banking systems while maintaining high renewal rates.

Online travel and hospitality

Travel platforms frequently process transactions involving an merchant in one country, a customer in another, and a service provider in a third, requiring complex settlement and FX management.

Marketplace platforms

Marketplaces connecting international buyers and sellers must manage multi-currency inflows and outflows, ensuring that the appropriate fees are deducted before distributing payments to global vendors.

In cijfers

10-15%
Authorisation Rate Variance

This represents the typical uplift observed when shifting from cross-border to local acquiring, as domestic issuers are less likely to flag local transactions as fraudulent.

3-5x
Average Interchange Increase

Industry standards show that inter-regional interchange fees are significantly higher than regulated domestic rates, particularly for transactions involving non-EEA cards processed in Europe.

1-3%
FX Conversion Margin

This is the typical range of currency conversion fees applied by processors and card schemes when the settlement currency differs from the transaction currency.

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Wat u krijgt met Grensoverschrijdende betalingsverwerking

  • Verwerk naadloos betalingen van internationale klanten.
  • Optimaliseer valutaconversie- en afwikkelingsprocessen.
  • Beheer diverse betaalmethoden over geografische grenzen heen.
  • Beperk risico's verbonden aan internationale transacties.
  • Voldoe wereldwijd aan regionale betalingsregelgeving.
  • Verbeter de klantervaring bij grensoverschrijdende aankopen.
  • Automated FX settlement options to assist in managing currency volatility and simplifying treasury reconciliation processes.
  • Compliance with international AML and KYB standards across multiple jurisdictions to maintain global processing stability.
  • Detailed reporting on cross-border fee structures including interchange, scheme fees, and international transaction surcharges.
  • Comprehensive dispute management tools designed to handle the specific complexities of international chargeback regulations.
See Grensoverschrijdende betalingsverwerking on your acquiring stack.

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

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Vragen over Grensoverschrijdende betalingsverwerking

Welke uitdagingen pakt grensoverschrijdende betalingsverwerking aan?

Het pakt problemen aan zoals hoge weigeringspercentages voor internationale kaarten, complexe valutaconversies, variërende voorkeuren voor betaalmethoden en naleving van regelgeving in verschillende landen. Cardflo consolideert deze uitdagingen in één enkel, beheersbaar platform voor handelaren.

Hoe optimaliseert Cardflo grensoverschrijdende autorisatiepercentages?

Door slimme routering naar lokale of gespecialiseerde acquirers, 3DS-optimalisatie en intelligente logica voor opnieuw proberen, verhoogt Cardflo de kans op goedkeuring van internationale transacties. Ons systeem past zich aan de voorkeuren van de uitgever en regionale betalingsnuances aan om het succes te maximaliseren.

Welke betaalmethoden worden ondersteund voor grensoverschrijdende transacties?

Cardflo ondersteunt een breed scala aan internationale betaalmethoden, waaronder belangrijke creditcards en debetkaarten, lokale bankoverschrijvingen en Alternatieve Betaalmethoden (APM's) die populair zijn in specifieke regio's. Dit zorgt ervoor dat uw klanten kunnen betalen met hun voorkeurs lokale opties.

What role does 3D Secure play in international processing?

3D Secure is a security protocol that provides an additional layer of authentication. In many regions, particularly the EEA under PSD2, its use is mandatory for most transactions.

For cross-border payments, implementing 3DS is crucial because it can provide a liability shift from the merchant to the issuer in the event of a fraud dispute. Furthermore, many international issuers will automatically decline non-authenticated traffic from foreign merchants as a default security posture.

Can domestic acquiring help reduce cross-border costs?

Yes, domestic or localised acquiring involves routing transactions through an acquiring bank located in the same region as the cardholder. This makes the transaction appear domestic, which typically results in lower interchange fees and higher authorisation rates.

To implement this, a merchant usually needs a local legal entity and a domestic bank account in that region. For businesses without a local presence, using a PSP with a broad international footprint is the standard alternative.

How is FX risk managed in cross-border payments?

FX risk occurs because exchange rates fluctuate between the time of authorisation and the time of settlement.

Merchants can manage this by settling in the same currency as the transaction, using fixed exchange rates provided by their gateway for a specific window, or using multi-currency accounts to hold funds until rates are favourable.

Some processors also offer dynamic currency conversion, which locks in the rate at the moment of purchase, transferring the FX risk and choice to the cardholder.

What are the common regulatory challenges for international merchants?

Merchants must navigate various data protection laws like GDPR, as well as PCI-DSS compliance for handling card data globally. Payment-specific regulations such as PSD3 and local AML requirements mean that merchants must be verified through rigorous KYB processes.

Furthermore, some countries have strict controls on capital outflows, which can affect the ability of an acquirer to remit funds to a merchant located in a different jurisdiction.

Aan de slag

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