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Cost analysis

Payment Integration Cost Breakdown: 2026

A complete payment-integration cost breakdown comparing Stripe, PayPal, Bolt, and Shop Pay across 47 DTC merchants. Flat-fee models save merchants 18% on average — see the data.

11 min read
18%
Average processing-cost savings for merchants on flat-fee pricing vs. percentage-based models — rising to 39% at the $50M GMV tier.
Source: Krepling research team — analysis of 47 DTC merchants ($500K–$50M GMV), Oct 2025–Mar 2026
On this page
  1. Total cost of ownership
  2. Setup & implementation
  3. Transaction fee components
  4. Monthly & subscription fees
  5. Hidden fees
  6. Real-world scenarios

Between October 2025 and March 2026, our research team conducted a comprehensive analysis of payment integration costs across 47 direct-to-consumer merchants processing between $500,000 and $50 million in annual gross merchandise value. We evaluated five leading payment gateway providers — Stripe, PayPal, Bolt, Shop Pay, and Krepling — tracking total cost of ownership across seven distinct cost categories.

Our methodology examined setup fees, monthly platform charges, transaction fee components (interchange, assessment, and processor markup), developer integration costs, maintenance expenses, and hidden charges that rarely appear in advertised pricing. The findings reveal significant cost disparities between flat-fee and percentage-based pricing models: merchants on flat-fee structures save an average of 18% on processing costs as transaction volume scales.

18%
average savings on flat-fee vs. percentage pricing
$1.65M
36-month savings at the $50M GMV tier
19
distinct hidden-fee categories identified

Total cost of ownership by payment gateway

The table below presents the complete 12-month and 36-month total cost of ownership for merchants across four revenue tiers. The data reveals how pricing-model structure drives long-term cost differences.

Provider$500K (12mo)$500K (36mo)$2M (12mo)$2M (36mo)$10M (12mo)$10M (36mo)$50M (12mo)$50M (36mo)Model
Krepling$11,200$33,600$39,800$119,400$185,000$555,000$890,000$2,670,000Flat-fee
Stripe$15,100$45,300$59,600$178,800$295,000$885,000$1,468,000$4,404,000Percentage
PayPal$16,800$50,400$66,200$198,600$321,000$963,000$1,592,000$4,776,000Percentage
Bolt$18,500$55,500$63,400$190,200$304,000$912,000$1,515,000$4,545,000Percentage
Shop Pay$14,900$44,700$58,100$174,300$290,000$870,000$1,441,000$4,323,000Percentage

Key finding: Merchants processing $10M+ in annual GMV save an average of 18% with flat-fee pricing versus percentage-based models. Cumulative savings reach $1,653,000 over 36 months at the $50M tier versus the lowest-cost percentage competitor (Shop Pay).

Percentage-based transaction fees create a cost curve that accelerates faster than revenue growth. The gap between flat-fee and percentage-based providers widens from $3,900 at $500K GMV to $578,000 at $50M GMV over 12 months. When extending the analysis to 36 months, setup and implementation costs become negligible — less than 3% of total spend for high-volume merchants — while transaction fee structures account for 87–92% of total cost of ownership.


Setup & implementation cost breakdown

Initial integration costs vary significantly by provider. Traditional gateways charge between $3,500 and $14,500 for technical implementation, while newer platforms leverage pre-built integrations to eliminate upfront barriers. Most merchants underestimate the true cost of developer time — for businesses without in-house dev resources, this becomes the single largest barrier to switching providers.

ProviderPlatform setup feeDeveloper integrationAvg. implementation timeSupport during setupTotal upfront
Krepling$0$0 (pre-built)2–4 hoursIncluded$0
Stripe$0$3,500–$8,00012–20 hoursStandard$3,500–$8,000
PayPal$0$2,500–$6,5008–16 hoursStandard$2,500–$6,500
Bolt$2,500$5,000–$12,00016–24 hoursPremium$7,500–$14,500
Shop Pay$0$1,500–$4,0004–8 hoursShopify support$1,500–$4,000

Zero-cost implementation models eliminate the $3,500–$14,500 barrier that typically delays gateway adoption for emerging DTC brands. Pre-built integrations reduce technical overhead by 85% compared to custom API implementations — merchants can begin processing within hours rather than weeks. For brands on tight margins, this speed-to-revenue matters more than marginal differences in transaction fees.


Transaction fee component breakdown

Most merchants focus on the advertised headline rate. Here’s what that misses: transaction fees consist of three distinct components. Interchange is paid to the bank that issued the customer’s card. Assessment fees go to the card networks (Visa, Mastercard, Amex). Processor markup is the gateway’s profit margin. The first two are identical across all providers — the third is where competition happens.

ProviderInterchangeAssessmentProcessor markupTotal per-txn %Fixed feeCost on $100
Krepling1.80%0.13%$0.25 flat1.93%$0.25$2.18
Stripe1.80%0.13%1.00% + $0.302.93%$0.30$3.23
PayPal1.80%0.13%1.19% + $0.293.12%$0.29$3.41
Bolt1.80%0.13%1.15% + $0.353.08%$0.35$3.43
Shop Pay1.80%0.13%1.00% + $0.302.93%$0.30$3.23

PayPal’s standard checkout rate is typically 3.49% + $0.49; the breakdown above reflects blended rates based on transaction volume and product mix. Actual rates vary by merchant agreement.

Interchange and assessment fees are identical across all providers — every gateway pays the same 1.93% to card networks. Cost differences come entirely from processor markup, the only variable merchants can control through gateway selection. On a $10M GMV business, a 1% processor markup costs $100,000 annually; a flat $0.25 fee costs $10,000 (at 40,000 transactions) — a $90,000 annual difference that compounds over time. Merchants with average order values above $85 benefit most from flat-fee structures, since percentage markups exceed fixed fees beyond that threshold.


Monthly platform & subscription fees

Beyond transaction fees, most gateways charge monthly platform fees, advanced-feature subscriptions, and volume-based tier pricing — adding $50–$2,500 to monthly operating costs. This complexity creates budgeting challenges: when asked to project annual costs, merchants consistently underestimate by 12–18% because they calculate transaction fees but forget platform fees, fraud add-ons, and currency markups.

ProviderBase monthlyFraud protectionChargeback mgmtAnalyticsMulti-currencyTypical monthly total
Krepling$0IncludedIncludedIncludedIncluded$0
Stripe$0$0 (Radar basic)$15/disputeIncluded1% markup$50–$300
PayPal$0$10–$30/mo$20/dispute$30/mo add-on2.5% markup$100–$400
Bolt$500IncludedIncludedIncludedIncluded$500–$3,000
Shop Pay*$0Included (Shopify)IncludedIncluded1.5% markup$0–$200

*Shop Pay requires an active Shopify subscription ($39–$2,000/mo), which is not reflected in the base monthly fee shown above.

While base monthly fees appear low across most providers, hidden add-ons create complexity. Fraud protection, chargebacks, and currency conversion generate $1,200–$14,400 in annual fees that don’t appear in advertised pricing. Merchants scaling internationally face the steepest surprises.


Hidden fees & ongoing charges

Our research identified 19 distinct hidden-fee categories across the five providers. These charges don’t appear in advertised pricing but add 8–14% to total cost of ownership. DTC merchants report that undisclosed fees add an average of $967 per month — PCI compliance fees, refund-fee retention, and international markups drive the majority of surprises.

Fee typeKreplingStripePayPalBoltShop Pay
International card fee+0.5%+1.0%+1.5%+0.8%+1.5%
Currency conversion1.0%1.0%2.5–4.0%1.5%1.5%
Refund fee retention$0Full fee keptFull fee kept50% keptFull fee kept
Chargeback/dispute fee$0$15$20$15$15
Declined transaction$0$0$0.25$0$0
ACH/eCheck processing$00.8% + $51.0% + $101.5%1.0%
PCI compliance fee$0$0$15–$50/moIncluded$0
Statement/batch fee$0$0$5/mo$0$0
Est. annual hidden ($2M GMV)$2,800$9,200$14,600$7,800$8,400

When issuing refunds, most providers retain the full transaction fee — costing merchants 2.9–3.1% of the refunded amount. The impact compounds in high-return industries: apparel brands with 25–35% return rates can lose $15,000–$40,000 annually to refund-fee retention alone. Merchants processing 20%+ international sales pay an additional 2.5–4% with PayPal versus 1% with flat-fee alternatives — a $20,000–$40,000 gap on $2M in cross-border GMV.


Real-world cost scenarios by merchant profile

To illustrate the practical impact, we modeled four DTC merchant profiles based on actual client data from our research cohort. Each reflects common patterns we observed across specific GMV tiers and industry verticals.

ProfileAnnual GMVAvg orderTransactionsRefund rateKreplingStripePayPalvs Stripevs PayPal
Emerging brand$500K$657,6928%$11,200$15,100$16,80026%33%
Growth-stage DTC$2M$8523,52910%$39,800$59,600$66,20033%40%
Established brand$10M$12580,00012%$185,000$295,000$321,00037%42%
Enterprise DTC$50M$180277,77815%$890,000$1,468,000$1,592,00039%44%

Across all four profiles, flat-fee models deliver 26–39% cost savings versus Stripe and 33–44% versus PayPal. Absolute dollar savings grow exponentially — from $3,900 annually for emerging brands to $702,000 annually for enterprise merchants — because percentage-based fees compound with growth while flat fees remain linear with transaction count.

Merchants with 12%+ refund rates see savings increase further with providers that return processor markup rather than retaining it — particularly relevant for apparel, beauty, and home-goods verticals where return rates commonly exceed averages.


The bottom line

The data reveals a clear pattern: flat-fee payment-processing architectures deliver measurable cost advantages as merchants scale. The gap between pricing models widens from 26% at $500K GMV to 39% at $50M+ GMV (comparing flat-fee to Stripe’s percentage model). For DTC brands navigating margin compression and rising acquisition costs, transparent pricing isn’t optional — it’s a competitive necessity.

The three cost drivers that separate traditional gateways from flat-fee alternatives are setup barriers, scaling penalties, and hidden charges — structural differences that translate to $20,000–$702,000 in annual savings for merchants processing $2M or more in annual GMV. Request a free checkout audit to see how much you’re losing to hidden fees.

Sources

Stripe Pricing — Stripe, Inc. (stripe.com/pricing, accessed March 2026). · PayPal Merchant Fees — PayPal Holdings, Inc. (accessed March 2026). · Shopify Payments Pricing — Shopify Inc. (accessed March 2026). · “Stripe vs. PayPal: Which Is Right for Your Business in 2026” — NerdWallet, 2026. · “Credit Card Processing Fees: A 2026 Guide for Businesses” — NerdWallet, 2026.

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