THE MARGIN / Benchmarks

Effective-rate benchmarks
by industry

A salon and a software company can pay wildly different effective rates and both be priced fairly. The difference isn't your processor — it's your card mix, your average ticket, and how the card gets entered.

8 min readUpdated June 2026By the MidPay desk

Quick answer

There is no universal "good" effective rate — your category sets the gravity. Illustrative blended ranges run roughly 2.2%–2.8% for retail, 2.5%–3.2% for restaurants, 2.7%–3.4% for healthcare, and 2.8%–3.5% for e-commerce. Card mix, average ticket, and entry method explain the spread. Compare your true effective rate to your category's midpoint; excess beyond it is usually processor markup.

There is no single "good" effective rate. The number that looks expensive for a clothing boutique can be a steal for a subscription app — because the two businesses route fundamentally different transactions through the same networks. Before you decide your rate is too high, you need to know where your category should land, and why.

Three forces set the gravity for every industry's effective rate. Get these right and you'll know whether your number is a bargain or a problem.

The three forces that move every industry's rate

Every benchmark below is downstream of the same three inputs:

Hold those three in your head and the rest of this article is just arithmetic.

Where each industry tends to land — and why

The ranges below are illustrative blended effective rates — total fees over total card volume — for a typical mid-market merchant. They are directional models built from public interchange structures, not guarantees. Your real number depends on your specific mix.

Illustrative effective-rate ranges by industry Directional blended ranges, not guarantees. Effective rate as a % of card volume. 2.0% 2.5% 3.0% 3.5% 4.0% Retail 2.2–2.8% Restaurants / QSR 2.5–3.2% Salon & spa 2.6–3.2% Healthcare 2.7–3.4% E-commerce 2.8–3.5% Professional svcs 2.9–3.6%
Illustrative only. Card-present, debit-heavy categories (retail) sit lowest; card-not-present and commercial-card-heavy categories (e-commerce, professional services) sit highest.

Your industry sets the gravity. Your processor decides how far above it you fly.

How to compare your own rate to your category

Benchmarks are only useful if you measure yourself the same way. Here's the honest comparison in four steps:

If you land well above your category's band and your card mix doesn't explain it, the gap is almost always markup — and markup is the one layer you can actually move.

Frequently asked questions

What is a good effective rate for my industry?

There is no single good rate. What looks expensive for retail can be a bargain for e-commerce. Illustrative blended ranges run roughly 2.2%–2.8% for retail, 2.5%–3.2% for restaurants, and 2.8%–3.5% for e-commerce, because card mix, ticket size, and entry method differ by category.

Why is e-commerce more expensive than retail?

Every e-commerce transaction is card-not-present by definition, so interchange starts higher and fraud and chargeback risk add cost. Premium and international cards stack on top. Retail benefits from card-present entry plus a healthy slug of low-cost debit, which keeps its interchange closer to the floor.

What three things set an industry's effective rate?

Card mix, average ticket, and entry method. Debit is capped low while rewards and corporate credit cost most; a fixed per-item interchange fee inflates the rate on small tickets; and keyed or online card-not-present transactions carry higher rates than physically dipped or tapped card-present ones.

How do I compare my rate to my category?

Compute your true effective rate — total card fees divided by total card volume for a full month — then compare it to your category's midpoint, not its edge. Adjust for your own card mix. If you land well above your band with no mix explanation, the excess is negotiable processor markup.

Key takeaways

  • There is no universal "good" rate — what's fair for e-commerce would be expensive for retail, because card mix, ticket size, and entry method differ.
  • Card-present, debit-heavy, large-ticket businesses (retail) land lowest; card-not-present and commercial-card-heavy businesses (e-commerce, professional services) land highest.
  • Compare yourself to your category's midpoint using your true effective rate — fees divided by volume — not the headline quote.
  • If you're well above your band and your card mix doesn't explain it, the excess is processor markup, the only negotiable layer.

Sources & how to verify

Visa USA Interchange Reimbursement Fee schedule and Mastercard U.S. Interchange Rate program tables (published by the networks). Federal Reserve Regulation II data on capped debit interchange. The ranges above are illustrative directional models derived from these public rate structures — they are not quoted prices or guarantees. Confirm every figure against your own merchant statement and your specific card mix.

See where your rate lands in your category

Send us a recent statement and we'll benchmark your effective rate against your industry — then show you how much of it is markup you can actually move.

Benchmark my rate → Prefer to browse first? See transparent pricing.