Statements
How to Read a Merchant Processing Statement (Without the Headache)
Processing statements are long, but they follow patterns. Once you know which blocks matter, you can skim past noise and focus on the numbers that drive cost.
Start with the summary page if your processor provides one. You are looking for total card sales, total fees charged for the month, and any section labeled interchange, discount, or plan fees. Some statements separate “processing charges” from “authorization” or “network” lines. Both sides count toward your true cost.
Find your discount and markup
On interchange-plus accounts, you should see interchange listed in detail or summarized by category, plus a consistent markup line (percentage and per-item). On tiered plans, you may only see buckets like qualified and non-qualified. Those buckets hide the spread between real interchange and what you pay.
If you cannot find interchange anywhere, ask your rep for an interchange breakdown. Without it, you cannot verify whether pricing is fair.
Many statements group card-present and card-not-present activity separately. If you take phone orders or invoices online, expect different interchange categories than your in-store taps. Highlight those sections when you review with leadership so marketing and operations know how their workflows influence cost, not just the accounting team.
Scan for recurring line items
Monthly service, PCI compliance or non-compliance, gateway access, and statement fees add up even when the discount rate looks low. Highlight anything that repeats every cycle. A few dollars here and there is often thousands per year.
Calculate one effective rate
Divide total fees by card sales for the same period. Compare that percentage month to month. Spikes usually mean more downgraded transactions, rate changes, or new line items. Omega Bank Card uses the same math when we review statements with merchants-we show you the effective rate and where each dollar goes.
Reading a statement is a skill, not a talent. After a couple of passes, you will recognize the sections that matter for your business and spot changes faster.
Keep a PDF of each month in one folder. When you negotiate or switch providers, that history saves time and protects you from “we have always charged that” surprises.
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