Payment processor

  • Written by Ganesh Pawar 3 min read
  • Updated: July 22, 2025

What is a payment processor?

A payment processor is the service that handles the back-end of an electronic transaction between a customer and a merchant. It transmits payment data, verifies it with the issuing bank and card network, and moves funds from the buyer’s account to the merchant’s account. Popular payment processors include Stripe, PayPal, Square, Adyen, Shopify Payments, and Worldpay.

It’s worth distinguishing the processor from related infrastructure at checkout. A payment gateway is what captures and encrypts a customer’s payment details at checkout, while the processor is what then routes that request to the banks for authorization and settlement. In ecommerce, a reliable payment processor is what makes that hand-off fast, secure, and consistent.

How does a payment processor work?

When a customer checks out online or in-store, the processor moves the transaction through a sequence of steps that usually completes in seconds:

  • The payment gateway captures the customer’s payment details and sends an encrypted request to the processor.
  • The processor forwards the request to the relevant card network, such as Visa, Mastercard, American Express, or Discover, or to the alternative payment scheme being used.
  • The card network routes the authorization request to the issuing bank, which approves or declines based on available funds, fraud signals, and policy.
  • The processor relays the approval or decline back to the merchant and the customer in real time.
  • For approved payments, the processor coordinates settlement, transferring funds from the issuing bank to the merchant account, usually within one to two business days.

Throughout this flow, processors apply encryption, tokenization, and fraud detection, which is what allows merchants to accept cards without storing raw card data on their own servers.

Example of payment processor

A customer is buying a moisturizer from a Shopify skincare store and pays with their credit card. When they hit “Pay Now,” the gateway encrypts the card data and hands it off to a payment processor like Stripe or Shopify Payments. The processor checks the card with the issuing bank, gets an approval, and sends confirmation back to the store, all in a few seconds. If the customer also opted into a monthly subscription, the same processor will be charged automatically against the stored card on every future renewal.

Driftcharge Tip

When choosing a payment processor, evaluate it across five practical dimensions: pricing model and per-transaction fees, fraud and chargeback tools, currency and cross-border support, ease of integration with your existing stack, and support for recurring billing if you run a subscription store. The wrong processor for a subscription business is the one that doesn’t handle stored cards, automatic retries on failed charges, and refunds cleanly.

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Ganesh Pawar

Ganesh Pawar is the founder of Driftcharge, a subscription management app designed to help Shopify merchants streamline and scale their subscription businesses. With a deep focus on solving real-world pain points—like legacy account page support, flexible subscription options, and advanced analytics—Ganesh is passionate about building tools that drive growth and retention.

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