Processing credit cards for a business outside the US in the website traffic niche, any suggestions?

by add2it
5 replies
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I am looking for service provider suggestions for processing credit cards for a business outside the US (UK and Australia) in the website traffic niche.

So far I am still using Stripe, but a friend of mine from the UK has just recently gotten his Stripe account getting closed for a particular website that was in the website traffic niche.

He needs a new provider that works with website traffic niche sites in the UK and I am just looking in case Stripe should ever ask me to move on as well.

From PayPal, 2Checkout, AlertPay to Stripe... what could be next?

Any suggestions would be appreciated.
#business #cards #credit #niche #processing #suggestions #traffic #website
  • Profile picture of the author WF- Enzo
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    Isn't PayPal the usual go-to?
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  • Profile picture of the author add2it
    PayPal was the 2nd after 2Checkout to not allow to sell products in the website traffic niche.

    Any other suggestions would be appreciated.
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  • Profile picture of the author savidge4
    Im not going to say that I work in that niche or ever have... but have you gone to your local bank to see what their options are? Outside of platforms I work with ( eBay, Etsy, Amazon etc ) I use a merchant account from my primary bank for any and every instance I accept payments for products and services.
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  • Profile picture of the author add2it
    I have no clue about the UK, but here in Australia there is just one that works in USD... the rest are AUD. And I somehow assume it would be harder to sell products in AUD than in USD.

    Anyway, that one Bank here is NAB and I don't remember anymore if I tried or if I just looked at their form and gave up without even trying.

    If all else fails, I might return to that option and will have to figure out how to explain website traffic as a product to a local bank that mainly understands local retail business.

    It somehow seems so much easier to open an account online.

    I suppose... the easier it is to get, the easier it is to lose?
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    • Profile picture of the author savidge4
      Originally Posted by add2it View Post

      It somehow seems so much easier to open an account online.
      Things are obviously a bit different in the banking sector than say the States. Apparently you can go into your bank and apply for a Foreign Exchange Account specifically for USD?

      Im not understanding why you would have to "explain" what it is you are selling? I know my bank has never asked.

      Granted things in AU are a bit more "strict", but its 2022 Probably somewhere in the 25% of all financial exchanges occur online.

      But neither you or I make the rules right? we have to play by them. I can just tell you what I know, and based on my experience with My USD bank this isnt really an issue - and in the long run easier than dealing with 2nd and 3rd tier banking solutions
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