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Table of contents
  1. How Payment Aggregators Work
  2. Payment Aggregator vs Gateway vs Facilitator
  3. Advantages of Payment Aggregators
  4. Limitations and When to Outgrow One
  5. Building Your Own Aggregator Model
  6. FAQ
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What Is a Payment Aggregator?

A payment aggregator is a payment service provider that processes card transactions on behalf of multiple merchants using a single master merchant account. Rather than requiring each business to apply for and maintain its own merchant account with an acquiring bank, the aggregator pools merchants together under one umbrella. This model dramatically simplifies the onboarding process, enabling businesses to start accepting payments in minutes rather than the days or weeks required for traditional merchant account applications.

Table of contents
  1. How Payment Aggregators Work
  2. Payment Aggregator vs Gateway vs Facilitator
  3. Advantages of Payment Aggregators
  4. Limitations and When to Outgrow One
  5. Building Your Own Aggregator Model
  6. FAQ
Do you have a question?
Contact author
Show all Show all

How Payment Aggregators Work

The aggregator model operates by inserting an intermediary between individual merchants and the broader payment ecosystem. Understanding this architecture is key to evaluating whether it fits your business needs.

The Master Merchant Account

At the core of the aggregator model is the master merchant account. The aggregator establishes a relationship with one or more acquiring banks and obtains a master merchant identification number (MID). All transactions from the aggregator's sub-merchants are processed under this single MID. The acquiring bank sees one large merchant (the aggregator), not hundreds or thousands of individual businesses.

Transaction Processing Flow

When a customer makes a purchase from a sub-merchant, the transaction flows through the aggregator's payment gateway to the acquiring bank for authorization. The card network routes the authorization request to the issuing bank, which approves or declines. Upon approval, the aggregator receives settled funds from the acquirer and then distributes the appropriate amount to each sub-merchant, minus processing fees.

Sub-Merchant Onboarding

Aggregators perform streamlined KYC (Know Your Customer) verification during onboarding. Because the aggregator assumes the risk associated with its sub-merchants, it can offer a lighter-touch application process. Basic identity verification, business validation, and risk assessment are performed, but the extensive underwriting typical of traditional merchant accounts is not required for each sub-merchant.

Payment Aggregator vs Gateway vs Facilitator

These three concepts are often confused. While they overlap, each serves a distinct function in the payment ecosystem:

AspectPayment AggregatorPayment GatewayPayment Facilitator
Primary FunctionPools merchants under master accountTransmits transaction data securelyRegistered aggregator with card networks
Merchant AccountShared master MIDMerchant's own or provided by PSPShared master MID (formally registered)
Risk LiabilityAggregator bears riskNo risk assumptionFull sub-merchant risk liability
Network RegistrationNot always requiredNot requiredRequired (Visa, Mastercard)
ExamplesSquare, Stripe, PayPalPayneteasy, Authorize.netStripe (as registered PayFac)

Advantages of Payment Aggregators

The aggregator model has revolutionized payment acceptance for small and mid-sized businesses:

Speed of Onboarding

The most significant advantage is time-to-market. Traditional merchant accounts require applications, underwriting, credit checks, and bank approval — a process that typically takes 3-14 business days. Aggregators can approve and activate merchants in minutes. For platforms and marketplaces that need to scale their merchant base quickly, this eliminates the biggest friction point.

Simplified Pricing

Aggregators typically offer flat-rate pricing (e.g., 2.9% + $0.30 per transaction) rather than interchange-plus models. While this may be more expensive at scale, it provides predictable costs that simplify financial planning. There are usually no monthly fees, gateway fees, or minimum volume requirements — you pay only when you process.

Reduced Compliance Burden

The aggregator handles PCI DSS compliance at the platform level. Sub-merchants benefit from the aggregator's security infrastructure without needing to independently achieve and maintain PCI certification. This is particularly valuable for small businesses without dedicated security teams.

Limitations and When to Outgrow One

While aggregators excel at simplicity and speed, they come with trade-offs that become more significant as businesses grow:

Higher Per-Transaction Costs

Flat-rate pricing is convenient but expensive at scale. A business processing $500,000 per month at 2.9% pays $14,500 in fees. With a dedicated merchant account on interchange-plus pricing, the same volume might cost $8,000-$10,000. The break-even point typically falls between $10,000 and $50,000 in monthly volume, depending on the industry and average transaction size.

Account Stability Risks

Because aggregators bear the risk for all sub-merchants, they tend to be more conservative with account holds, freezes, and terminations. Sudden spikes in volume, higher-than-average chargeback rates, or transactions flagged by risk algorithms can result in frozen funds with limited recourse. Dedicated merchant accounts offer more stability and direct relationships with acquiring banks.

Limited Customization

Aggregators offer standardized checkout experiences with limited branding options. Businesses that need white-label payment solutions, custom checkout flows, or deep integration with internal systems often find aggregator APIs restrictive compared to enterprise payment processing platforms.

Building Your Own Aggregator Model

For platforms and marketplaces that want to offer aggregator-like simplicity to their merchants while maintaining control over the payment experience, there are two paths:

Become a Registered PayFac

Registering with Visa and Mastercard as a payment facilitator gives you formal authority to aggregate sub-merchants. This requires significant investment in compliance infrastructure, underwriting capabilities, and acquiring relationships. Typical timeline: 12-18 months. Best for platforms with clear payment monetization strategies and the resources to build compliance teams.

Use a PayFac-as-a-Service Platform

Payneteasy provides a payment infrastructure platform used by payment aggregators (PayFacs) and PSPs to manage processing, routing, and integrations.

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