Suggest Payment Processors For International Merchants

10 replies
I do not reside in the US and so cannot use paypal. What other payment processsors can be used to sell online aside google checkout, 2checkout, clickbank.
#international #merchants #payment #processors #suggest
  • Profile picture of the author tehnolife
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    Authorize.net( 50$ signup fee) , Alertpay.com(free) and perfectmoney.com are very good. You can choose one of these, authorize.com I think is the best!
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    • Profile picture of the author jvjoe
      Originally Posted by tehnolife View Post

      Authorize.net( 50$ signup fee) , Alertpay.com(free) and perfectmoney.com are very good. You can choose one of these, authorize.com I think is the best!
      You can't use AlertPay because they don't process Credit Card, it has been mention several times here on the forum, though with the new changing of AlertPay to Payza we hope they process Credit card.
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      • Profile picture of the author benjigbird
        Originally Posted by jvjoe View Post

        You can't use AlertPay because they don't process Credit Card, it has been mention several times here on the forum, though with the new changing of AlertPay to Payza we hope they process Credit card.
        AP or Payza now accept credit cards i believe but only once the buyer signs up so thats a pain. Regnow is free and I think you can sign up from most countries.
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  • Profile picture of the author samstephens
    Hi Jonat,

    Non-US residents can use Paypal. Or are you in a blocked country? Which country and you in, and this could help point you in the right direction!

    cheers
    Sam
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    • Profile picture of the author ScooterDaMan
      This is obviously far too late to help jonat, but perhaps someone else will see this and it will be of help to them at some point in time.

      Through another forum, I recently heard about a website called myusbusiness.com that will set people up with everything from US bank accounts to payment processors to US business entities. Although I have not used them myself (I live in the U.S.), several people have reported that they were able to easily set up a U.S. business entity, bank and get processing by using these people.

      I hope this helps someone, someday.
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  • Profile picture of the author sammib01
    It would help if people would put what country they are in. Most countries have PayPal and the others as well. I have setup Businesses for people in Gibraltar, Isle of Man, Malta and other Tax free countires. They all have PayPal and most other payment systems. These are very small countries and if they have it most do.
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  • Profile picture of the author hassan007
    International Payment Processors List

    Authorize.net
    2checkout.com
    Plimus.com
    Paypal.com
    Alertpay.com
    CCBill.com
    PerfectMoney.com
    SWREG.com
    Shopify.com
    WorldPay.com
    SagePay.com
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  • Profile picture of the author ScooterDaMan
    PayPal is not a bank and they are not regulated like a bank is. They set their own rules and policies and have to answer to nobody. If folks only took the time to read the actual policies they are agreeing to when they sign up with PayPal, they would NEVER do it. That goes for both customers and merchants alike. When you sign up, you are giving them full access to deposit or withdraw money from your actual bank account as they see fit.

    There are plenty of merchants who have had no problems with PayPal. That is only because they have been lucky enough to avoid a scammer. This is not a concern for people who sell digital products, really. What's the worst that can happen? You issue a refund. You did not have any cost for shipping; you did not have any cost for a product.

    I have seen all too many cases of an unscrupulous customer ordering something from a website using PayPal that claims that they never got the product. PayPal absolutely WILL NOT back the merchant. There are two cases I know of just last month, in fact, where merchants had packages delivered to customers with signature confirmation and in one case, the customer claimed the goods never arrived, in the other, they say they never ordered it (they sure had no problem signing for it, though). In both cases, PayPal sided with the customer and withdrew the funds from the merchant's account. One was over $2,000; the other was over $5,000. Remember; they have signed slips from the shipping company that the packages were delivered.

    PayPal is so slanted toward protecting the customer, that you will never win in a chargeback dispute. The fact is, they don't care; they get their money either way. And, they know that in many cases, the merchant has no choice but to continue using them. Many countries have no other option.

    I absolutely will not buy anything from any merchant that only offers PayPal as their payment method (even the ones that are using PayPal Pro and accept regular credit cards). It is an illegitimate payment processor used by people - both customers and merchants alike - who have no other choice. It screams "low budget" and "no credit."

    There's a good, less harsh than I have put it article about taking PayPal on your website at http://storecoach.com/blog/can-i-jus...essing-orders/
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