Interchange-plus vs
subscription pricing:
which wins at what volume
Subscription pricing doesn't remove the markup — it moves it from a percentage of every swipe to a flat number on your calendar. Whether that trade pays off depends entirely on how much you process.
Quick answer
Subscription (membership) pricing charges a flat monthly fee, interchange and assessments at cost, and a small fixed fee per transaction — no percentage markup. Interchange-plus charges a small percentage markup on top of cost instead. The crossover is simple arithmetic: whichever markup is smaller in dollars for your actual monthly volume wins. As an illustrative example, a 0.30% interchange-plus markup crosses a $99/month membership fee around $33,000 in monthly card volume — below that line, no-membership interchange-plus usually costs less; above it, the flat fee can win.
Subscription pricing — sometimes called membership or wholesale pricing — gets pitched as the model that "eliminates markup." It doesn't. It restructures where the margin sits: instead of a percentage that scales with your volume, you pay a flat membership fee that doesn't scale at all, plus interchange and assessments passed through at cost, plus a small fixed fee per transaction. Whether that's cheaper than a conventional interchange-plus markup is not a philosophy question — it's a volume question, and it has a specific dollar answer.
What subscription pricing actually charges
A subscription-priced account has three line items instead of two:
- A flat monthly membership fee — commonly somewhere in the $50–$200/month range depending on the provider and account size. This is where the processor's margin lives.
- Interchange and assessments at cost — the same published network rates you'd see on any interchange-plus statement, passed through with no percentage markup added.
- A small fixed fee per transaction — often a handful of cents, sometimes waived above certain volume tiers.
Compare that to a conventional interchange-plus quote: interchange and assessments at cost, plus a small percentage markup (commonly 0.15%–0.40%) and a few cents per transaction. The interchange and per-transaction pieces are structurally identical between the two models. The entire difference comes down to one thing: a flat monthly number versus a percentage of volume.
A percentage markup grows with your revenue. A membership fee doesn't grow at all — which is exactly why the two cross at a specific volume, not a specific business type.
The crossover math
Because a membership fee is fixed and a markup is a percentage, there's one dollar of monthly volume where they cost exactly the same — everything below it favors no-membership interchange-plus, everything above it favors the membership model. The formula is simple:
Crossover volume = Monthly membership fee ÷ Markup percentage
Run the numbers on an illustrative example: a $99/month membership fee against a 0.30% interchange-plus markup.
- $99 ÷ 0.30% = $33,000 in monthly card volume is the crossover point.
- Below $33,000/month in volume, the 0.30% markup costs less than $99 — interchange-plus without a membership fee is cheaper.
- Above $33,000/month, 0.30% of volume exceeds $99 — the membership model, with its fixed fee, starts costing less on the markup line.
- At $100,000/month, a 0.30% markup is $300 versus a flat $99 membership — a $201/month gap in favor of the membership model, before accounting for any per-transaction fee difference.
These are illustrative figures built from typical published markup ranges, not a quote for any specific account — your own membership fee, markup percentage, and per-transaction fee will differ and should be modeled on your actual statement.
Why the crossover moves with your business, not just your volume
Three things shift where the line actually sits for you:
- Your markup percentage. A leaner 0.15% markup pushes the crossover higher (you'd need roughly $66,000/month to justify a $99 fee); a richer 0.40% markup pulls it down to about $24,750/month.
- Per-transaction fee differences. If the membership plan's per-swipe fee is a few cents higher or lower than the interchange-plus plan's, high-transaction-count, low-ticket businesses (coffee, quick-service) need to fold that into the model — it can outweigh the percentage-markup savings entirely.
- Volume seasonality. A business with a hard slow season pays the same fixed membership fee every month regardless of volume, which erodes the model's advantage during the months it needs it least.
This is also why subscription pricing tends to get marketed at higher-volume merchants: the fixed fee is genuinely negligible once you're doing six figures a month in card volume, and genuinely painful once you're doing a few thousand.
What subscription pricing does not change
Two things stay identical no matter which model you pick, and it's worth being explicit about them so a sales pitch doesn't imply otherwise:
- Interchange itself. Neither model changes what Visa, Mastercard, or the issuing bank charge — those rates are set by the networks, not your processor, in either structure.
- Your card mix still matters. A debit-heavy, low-ticket business pays less in raw interchange under either model. Subscription pricing doesn't insulate you from a rewards-card-heavy mix — it just changes how the processor's own margin is collected.
How to model it on your own numbers
- Pull your last three statements and get your average monthly card volume — not a guess, the real trailing number, including seasonal months if you have them.
- Get the exact figures from each quote: the membership fee, the interchange-plus markup percentage, and the per-transaction fee under both structures.
- Compute crossover volume (membership fee ÷ markup percentage) and compare it to your actual average monthly volume.
- Multiply the per-transaction fee difference by your transaction count, not just your dollar volume — high-frequency, low-ticket merchants can lose the entire markup advantage here.
- Model your slowest month separately. A flat membership fee that looks fine on your average month can be a bad deal in your worst one.
If a subscription-pricing sales conversation skips straight to "no markup" without naming the membership fee, the per-transaction fee, and your actual volume, that's the same red flag as a flat-rate quote that won't break out its markup — ask for the number in writing.
Frequently asked questions
What is subscription or membership pricing?
A flat monthly membership fee that replaces a percentage markup. On top of the membership, you pay published interchange and network assessments at cost, plus a small fixed fee per transaction — but no percentage added on volume.
At what volume does subscription pricing start winning?
The crossover is where a typical interchange-plus markup, applied to your monthly card volume, would exceed the flat membership fee. As an illustrative example, a 0.30% markup crosses a $99/month membership fee at roughly $33,000 in monthly card volume — below that, interchange-plus with no membership fee usually costs less; above it, the membership model can win.
Does subscription pricing eliminate the markup entirely?
No. It restructures where the margin sits — from a percentage of volume to a fixed monthly fee plus a small per-transaction fee. At high enough volume that fixed cost becomes negligible per dollar processed, which is why the model favors high-volume merchants.
Is subscription pricing the same as flat-rate pricing?
No. Flat-rate charges one blended percentage that already includes interchange, assessments, and markup. Subscription/membership pricing passes interchange and assessments through at cost, unbundled, and charges its margin as a monthly fee instead of a percentage.
Key takeaways
- Subscription pricing doesn't remove markup — it moves it from a percentage of volume to a flat monthly fee.
- The crossover is arithmetic: membership fee ÷ markup percentage tells you the monthly volume where the two models cost the same.
- Per-transaction fee differences can matter more than the markup for high-frequency, low-ticket businesses — model both, not just the percentage.
- Neither model changes underlying interchange or your card mix — those are set by the networks and your customers' cards, not your pricing structure.
Sources & how to verify
Visa USA Interchange Reimbursement Fee schedules and Mastercard U.S. Interchange Rate program tables, both published openly by the networks, define the interchange and assessment costs referenced here. Membership-fee and markup-percentage figures are illustrative ranges built from commonly published processor rate structures, not a specific vendor quote — the only authoritative comparison is your own trailing statements run against a written membership and an itemized interchange-plus quote.
Model both structures on your own volume
Send us a recent statement and we will run the crossover math on your actual monthly volume and card mix — membership fee vs interchange-plus markup — so you can see the real dollar answer instead of a sales pitch.
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