E-handel

E-handel betalinger for Import- og eksport-e-handel.

Import- og eksport-e-handelsbedrifter navigerer komplekse internasjonale betalingslandskap. Cardflo tilbyr en robust betalingsorkestreringsplattform som forenkler grenseoverskridende transaksjoner, administrerer ulike valutaer og optimaliserer betalingssuksess for globale handelsoperasjoner.

Bransje
Import- og eksport-e-handel
Kategori
E-handel
Cardflo-støtte
Ja
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Oversikten

International trade in the digital sphere involves complicated technical requirements for firms managing goods moving across borders. This sector typically involves high-value transactions, complex logistics data, and the necessity to manage multiple currency corridors simultaneously.

In the payments stack, import and export ecommerce sits between global logistics and financial settlement, requiring tight integration with both domestic and international acquirers.

For merchants, this means navigating varied authorisation environments where an issuer in one territory may apply different risk logic to an cross-border transaction than a local one.

Managing these flows requires a strategy that incorporates smart routing to reduce instances of false positives and unnecessary declines.

Additionally, the role of a Payment Service Provider in this vertical often extends to providing granular data on Merchant Category Codes and ensuring compliance with regional regulations like PSD2 and SCA for European legs of a transaction.

Effective execution depends on maintaining low latency between the gateway and global schemes while accurately calculating technical fees such as interchange and scheme-fee components across different jurisdictions.

Slik fungerer det

  1. Currency and region identification

    The gateway identifies the customer location and preferred currency via the BIN during the checkout process.

    This allows the merchant to present prices in the local currency of the importer or exporter, reducing friction and minimising the likelihood of cart abandonment caused by unexpected foreign exchange conversions during the authorisation phase.

  2. Intelligent routing to local acquirers

    To improve authorisation rates, the transaction is routed to an acquirer with a local presence in the region of the issuer.

    Merchants often use multiple MIDs to facilitate this, as domestic transactions generally attract lower interchange fees and higher success rates compared to intercontinental or cross-border payment flows.

  3. Risk and fraud screening

    High-value export orders undergo automated risk analysis using tools that evaluate IP addresses, device fingerprinting, and AVS data.

    Because international trade is susceptible to friendly-fraud and high-value disputes, the system may trigger 3DS challenges selectively to meet SCA requirements without unnecessarily impeding the checkout experience for legitimate corporate buyers.

  4. Authorisation and settlement reconciliation

    Once the issuer authorises the payment, funds are held until the capture command is issued, often synchronised with the dispatch of physical goods.

    The settlement process then involves converting the funds into the merchant's base currency, or holding them in multi-currency accounts to facilitate easier payout to international suppliers.

Hvorfor det er viktig

Optimising authorisation success rates

Cross-border transactions frequently suffer from higher decline rates due to issuer caution regarding international traffic. By utilising a global payment infrastructure that prioritises local acquiring, businesses can reduce the volume of soft declines.

This ensures that high-value export contracts are not lost to technical mismatches or overly aggressive fraud filters, allowing for more predictable cash flow and operational stability.

Managing total cost of acceptance

For businesses at scale, the cost of international payments can be significant when factoring in currency conversion fees and cross-border scheme-fee markups. Implementing a strategy that uses domestic acquiring connections helps to bring these costs in line with local standards.

Transparent pricing models, such as interchange-plus-plus, allow merchants to analyse exactly where their costs are coming from and optimise their payment mix accordingly.

Regulatoriske merknader

Sanctions and AML compliance

Import and export businesses must adhere to strict Anti-Money Laundering and Know Your Customer regulations. This involves screening parties against international sanctions lists to prevent transactions with restricted entities or regions.

Payment providers play a role here by ensuring that the flow of funds is transparent and that all transactional data meets the reporting standards required by financial regulators and card schemes.

Cross-border tax and duty

While not strictly a payment regulation, the calculation of VAT and customs duties is often integrated into the checkout experience. Schemes and regulators require that the final amount authorised is clearly communicated to the cardholder.

Failure to handle these calculations correctly can lead to disputes or refusal of shipments, which in turn increases the risk of chargebacks and administrative retrieval requests for the merchant.

Bruksområder

B2B wholesale exports

A manufacturer selling industrial components globally uses multi-currency processing to accept payments in over 100 currencies, ensuring price consistency and stability for international distributors while receiving settlement in their primary functional currency.

Direct-to-consumer global retail

An ecommerce brand expanding into the Asian market integrates local APMs such as digital wallets to cater to regional preferences, as traditional card schemes may have lower penetration or higher rejection rates in those specific corridors.

Machinery and high-value imports

Firms importing expensive equipment benefit from advanced dunning and retry logic for high-ticket transactions that may initially fail due to temporary credit limit issues or heightened scrutiny from corporate card issuers.

I tall

5%–12%
Authorisation improvement

Typical uplift observed by merchants switching from cross-border to local acquiring routes, according to industry benchmarks.

20%–30%
Reduction in checkout friction

Reported reduction in abandonment when local alternative payment methods are offered alongside traditional card options.

15%–25%
Chargeback reduction

Industry range for reduction in disputes when using 3-D Secure and clear soft-descriptors in international transactions.

Payments built for Import- og eksport-e-handel.

Book a scoping call to see how Cardflo would set you up.

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Hva er inkludert.

  • Globale innløserfunksjoner for å støtte transaksjoner på tvers av flere regioner.
  • Behandling og oppgjør i flere valutaer for å forenkle internasjonal handel.
  • Smart ruting for å optimalisere suksessraten for grenseoverskridende transaksjoner.
  • Støtte for et bredt spekter av lokale og internasjonale alternative betalingsmetoder.
  • Avansert svindelforebygging skreddersydd for internasjonale og høyverdige import/eksport.
  • Mekanismer for gjenoppretting av avviste transaksjoner for å gjeninnhente inntekter fra internasjonale betalingsfeil.
  • Tokenisation of payment credentials to facilitate secure and compliant repeat purchases for international B2B clients.
  • Comprehensive support for 3-D Secure protocols to satisfy SCA requirements across various global jurisdictions.
  • Real-time visibility into decline codes to help merchants refine their international payment acceptance strategies.
  • Flexible integration options to connect global payment flows directly with existing ERP and logistics platforms.
Route Import- og eksport-e-handel traffic with confidence.

Talk to an acquiring specialist about your MID setup.

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Vanlige spørsmål.

Hvordan håndterer Cardflo internasjonale betalinger for import/eksport?

Cardflo tilbyr globale innløserfunksjoner og behandling av flere valutaer. Dette gjør det mulig for import-/eksportbedrifter å akseptere betalinger fra ulike land og gjøre opp i foretrukne valutaer, noe som effektiviserer internasjonale finansielle operasjoner.

Kan Cardflo redusere betalingsfeil for grenseoverskridende transaksjoner?

Ja, Cardflos smarte ruting dirigerer internasjonale transaksjoner til de mest effektive innløserne. Kombinert med verktøy for gjenoppretting av avviste transaksjoner, forbedrer dette autorisasjonsratene betydelig for grenseoverskridende betalinger, noe som reduserer tapt inntekt.

Hvilken svindelbeskyttelse tilbyr Cardflo for internasjonal handel?

Cardflo tilbyr avanserte verktøy for svindelforebygging spesielt utviklet for internasjonale transaksjoner. Disse tiltakene hjelper til med å oppdage og redusere svindelaktiviteter i import-/eksportoperasjoner, og sikrer effektivt global handel med høy verdi.

Why are MCCs important for international trade businesses?

Merchant Category Codes are used by issuers to identify the type of business a merchant operates. Some high-value import and export categories are considered higher risk by financial institutions.

If a business is assigned an incorrect MCC, it may face higher decline rates or increased interchange costs.

Ensuring the correct MCC is associated with your merchant identification numbers is vital for accurate risk assessment by the issuer and to ensure compliance with the rules set by card schemes like Visa and Mastercard.

How can merchants defend against international chargebacks?

Defending against chargebacks in international trade requires robust evidence, including proof of delivery and detailed transaction logs. The representment process involves submitting this data to the issuer to prove the transaction was legitimate.

Utilizing tools like soft-descriptors can also help by ensuring the merchant's name is clearly recognisable on the buyer's bank statement, which reduces 'friendly fraud' disputes where a customer fails to recognise a legitimate purchase.

Advanced gateway features can also automate the collection of the necessary data attributes required for a successful reversal.

What role does tokenisation play in global B2B exports?

Tokenisation replaces sensitive card data with a non-sensitive equivalent, known as a token. In global trade, where repeat orders are common, storing a token instead of the actual card number reduces the merchant's PCI-DSS compliance burden and enhances security.

Network tokens, in particular, are updated automatically by the schemes if a card expires or is replaced, ensuring that subsequent authorisation attempts for recurring orders do not fail due to outdated information, which is a common issue in long-term export relationships.

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