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Stripe Payments Explained for UK Businesses

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Stripe Payments Explained for UK Businesses

Last updated 22/01/2026

What Are Stripe Payments?

Stripe Payments is a payment processing service provided by Stripe that allows UK businesses to accept cards and other digital payments. Unlike traditional merchant account banks or standalone card machine providers, Stripe operates the payments infrastructure, including gateway functions, acquiring, and settlement facilitation.

How Stripe Payments Work in the UK

Payment initiation:

A customer enters their card details online or uses their card/digital wallet in person with a Stripe card machine. This begins the payment process.

Encryption and gateway processing:

The card details are sent to Stripe’s payment gateway. Here, the information is encrypted, protecting it from cyber attacks and other threats, allowing it to be securely transmitted for processing.

Authorisation request:

The acquiring bank receives a request from Stripe to authorise the payment. Stripe acts as the merchant, with its business treated as a sub-merchant, so the business does not need to set up a separate merchant account.

Bank approval or decline:

Now it’s up to the bank to decide whether to approve or decline the payment. The transaction passes through the relevant card network to the customer’s issuing bank, which checks the account and makes the decision.

Response to the customer:

Then the reverse happens as the issuing bank’s decision is returned through the card network, the acquiring bank, and Stripe’s gateway. The business then informs its customer whether the payment was accepted or declined.

Clearing and settlement:

Once approved, the issuing bank transfers the funds via the card network to the acquiring bank. All transaction details are recorded and reconciled.

Payout to the business:

After settlement is completed, Stripe transfers the funds to the business’s existing bank account. Stripe typically settles its payments within 1-3 working days, depending on the card or payment type.

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Stripe’s UK Fees and Costs Explained

Stripe customers do not pay a monthly fee for their services; Stripe instead operates a flat-rate pricing model, meaning that its customers are only charged when a transaction is processed. This applies to online card payments, in-person payments made through Stripe Terminal, international cards, currency conversion, refunds, and disputes.

This offers simplicity and predictability to businesses, although costs do vary depending on card/payment type.

Below is a table with a comprehensive overview of Stripe’s card fees. These fees are true as of the 16th January 2026.

Fee TypeWhat It IsFee
Setup feesAccount creation and activationNo setup fees
Monthly feesOngoing platform or account accessNo monthly fees
Online card payments (standard UK cards)Processing UK-issued debit and credit cards online1.5% + 20p per transaction
Online card payments (premium UK cards)Processing UK-issued premium or rewards cards online1.9% + 20p per transaction
Online card payments (EEA cards)Processing cards issued in the European Economic Area2.5% + 20p per transaction
+ 2% if currency conversion is required
Online card payments (non-EEA cards)Processing cards issued outside the EEA3.25% + 20p per transaction
+ 2% if currency conversion is required
Link paymentsAccelerated checkout using saved customer details1.5% + 20p (standard UK cards)
\n1.9% + 20p (premium UK cards)
Buy Now, Pay Later (Klarna)Instalment payments via KlarnaFrom 4.99% + 35p per successful transaction
Bacs Direct DebitUK bank debit payments1% per transaction
Minimum 20p, capped at £4.00
Dispute (chargeback)Handling a cardholder dispute£20.00 per dispute received
Manual dispute evidence submissionSubmitting evidence to contest a dispute£20.00 (returned if dispute is won)
Smart DisputesAutomated dispute handling using Stripe tools30% of the disputed amount if won
In-person card payments (EEA cards)Card-present transactions via Stripe Terminal1.4% + 10p per transaction
In-person card payments (non-EEA cards)Card-present transactions with non-EEA cards2.9% + 10p per transaction
Tap to Pay authorisationAuthorisation fee for Tap to Pay transactions+10p per authorisation
Point-to-point encryption (optional)Additional encryption for in-person payments+4p per authorisation
Card readers (hardware)Purchase of Stripe-compatible card readers£49.00 – £279.00 depending on machine model (excl. VAT)
Financial AccountsStripe business account with no minimum balanceIncluded
FPS fundingFunding via Faster Payments ServiceIncluded
Instant payoutsReceiving funds within minutes1% of payout amount
Minimum 40p
Domestic payoutsSending money to UK recipients50p per payout
International payoutsSending money to recipients in 50+ countries50p per payout
Cross-border fees from +0.25%
FX fees from +0.5%
Multi-currency settlementSettling and paying out in additional currencies1% of payout volume or minimum fee
Instant currency conversionConverting currencies within Stripe balancesFrom 0.5% of the converted amount
Business cardsVirtual and physical cards linked to Financial AccountsIncluded
No cross-border or FX fees

Stripe Card Readers and Card Machines

While other UK payment processors offer a standalone card machine that is rented from a payment provider, Stripe instead offers in-person payment hardware through Stripe Terminal, including Stripe card machines designed to integrate with existing systems.

Stripe does not offer rental options; all devices must be purchased outright and are designed to work alongside Stripe’s software integrations, rather than operating as fully independent terminals. This allows businesses to take both online and in-person payments through one payment ecosystem.

Stripe’s in-person payment options include:

Depending on the device, it may rely on a Wi-Fi, Ethernet, Bluetooth or mobile internet connection. Because they are designed to operate alongside other devices and software integrations, this makes Stripe well-suited to businesses that want a centralised payment ecosystem, but without the complexity of bundles, hardware and monthly fees offered by traditional UK providers.

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Online Payments vs In-Person Payments with Stripe

Stripe allows its customers to accept both online and in-person payments within the same system. However, there are some nuances that potential users need to be aware of.

Online payments are also known as “card-not-present transactions.” This means there is no physical card involved in the process, and customers typically enter their payment details remotely through a website, app, or digital checkout. Online payments rely solely on software to process transactions and do not require hardware like card machines.

In-person, or “card-present transactions,” are those that take place in-person. To facilitate these payments, hardware such as a card reader or a compatible mobile device is needed.
These differences affect how payments are set up, managed, and scaled over time, even when both transaction types are handled within the same Stripe account.

A prime example of this is the risk levels that come with each payment type. Card-present transactions typically involve lower fraud risk because the cardholder and card are physically present, while card-not-present transactions carry higher fraud and dispute exposure and may require additional security measures. This then impacts the types and amount of fees paid by the merchant.

Using Stripe for both online and in-person payments can centralise transaction data and payout management within a single system. However, due to the differences in payment contexts, reconciliation and operational considerations can vary due to transaction types, payment flows, and supporting infrastructure.

Stripe helps to unify both payment types, but businesses still need to understand the difference between accepting online and in-person payments and how this will impact their decision-making and cash flow.

ConsiderationOnline Payments (Card-Not-Present)In-Person Payments (Card-Present)
Payment environmentRemote, digital checkoutPhysical point of sale
Cardholder presenceCardholder not presentCardholder and card present
Hardware requirementNo physical payment hardwareRequires a reader or a compatible device
Fraud risk profileHigher risk, additional verificationLower risk due to physical presence
SetupSoftware onlySoftware plus hardware and connectivity
Scaling and growthExpands digitallyAdds devices, locations, and integrations

How to Set Up a Stripe Account for UK Businesses

Although setting up a Stripe account is quick, it is a multi-stage process that you must first go through before being able to take payments. Below are the five key stages you’ll need to go through to get set up.
Stage 1

Apply for a Stripe account

Begin by creating a Stripe account and verifying a business email address. This provides access to the Stripe Dashboard but does not automatically enable live payments or payouts.
Stage 2

Complete business verification

To activate the account, Stripe requires businesses to complete a business profile. This information is used to meet know-your-customer (KYC) and compliance obligations and must be approved before certain capabilities are enabled.
Stage 3

Activate payment acceptance

Once verification is completed, live payment acceptance is enabled. Businesses can then choose how they want to accept payments, such as through no-code tools, platform integrations, or custom implementations, depending on their setup.
Stage 4

Configure payouts to a bank account

During the set-up process, businesses will be required to fill out their banking information as Stripe does not provide a dedicated bank account. Instead, funds will be deposited into the business’s existing bank account and can be managed through the Stripe Dashboard.
Stage 5

Account for payout timing and initial waiting periods

It should be noted that payments are not instant. Depending on the payment and card type, payments will typically clear within one to three business days.

Stripe Corporate Cards

Stripe corporate cards are expense cards that are an additional service by Stripe Issuing, and they are not required to accept payments. They come in both digital and physical forms, with digital cards costing 10p per card and £3.50 (plus shipping costs) per physical card. These are designed for businesses that want to make online and in-person purchases for internal use or business expenses.

Advantages and Limitations of Stripe Payments

Advantages of Stripe Payments

One of Stripe’s main advantages is the speed and flexibility of its setup without the need for long-term contracts or bundled hardware packages.
Their software-first approach makes it well-suited for businesses that want more customisation in their payment-taking abilities, including third-party and custom integrations.
Stripe also centralises in-person and online payments within a single system, as well as facilitating multi-currency and international payments, enabling businesses to seamlessly trade outside of the UK.


Limitations of Stripe Payments

Stripe operates with standardised account oversight and support structures, meaning that smaller businesses may have limited access to dedicated account management or escalation.
Stripe may review or restrict accounts in line with its contractual, compliance, and regulatory obligations, temporarily restricting, limiting, or completely removing the ability to take payments.
While flat-rate pricing offers predictability, businesses may outgrow this pricing model when compared to negotiated or interchange-plus pricing that is offered by more traditional UK merchant account providers.

Is Stripe Right for Your Business?

Stripe is designed to support online-first and software-driven payment models, but suitability depends on how you take payments and the industry you operate in. Certain industries are restricted or prohibited under Stripe’s policies due to regulatory, legal, and financial partner requirements.

Stripe is commonly used by:

  • SaaS and subscription-based businesses
  • E-commerce brands selling physical or digital goods online
  • Marketplaces and platforms facilitating third-party payments
  • App-based or embedded payment use cases
  • Businesses accepting international or multi-currency payments

 

When assessing whether Stripe is appropriate for your business, consider:

  • Whether most of your payments are online rather than in-person
  • Whether your business model fits within Stripe’s supported or restricted categories
  • Whether your industry involves regulatory oversight, licensing, or elevated risk
  • Whether you are comfortable operating within standardised account review and compliance processes

Stripe Payments FAQs

What is Stripe Payments?
Stripe Payments is a payment processing platform that allows businesses to accept online and in-person payments. It supports various payment methods, including credit cards, bank transfers, and digital wallets, and integrates easily with websites and apps for secure, fast transactions.

Yes, Stripe allows full or partial refunds of non-disputed payments via the Dashboard or API. Refunds typically take 5–10 business days to reach the customer’s account. Processing fees from the original transaction are not returned.

Yes, Stripe is highly secure. It’s PCI Level 1 certified and follows industry best practices, including encryption, access control, vulnerability testing, and SOC audits. It also supports multi-factor authentication, HTTPS, and continuously monitors systems for threats or breaches.
Yes, Stripe is highly secure. It’s PCI Level 1 certified and follows industry best practices, including encryption, access control, vulnerability testing, and SOC audits. It also supports multi-factor authentication, HTTPS, and continuously monitors systems for threats or breaches.

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