"Crypto is cheaper than cards" gets repeated a lot, usually without numbers. It's mostly true, but the interesting part is why — and where crypto isn't free either. Let's actually break it down.
What a card payment really costs you
The headline rate your processor quotes is never the whole bill. A card payment is a stack of fees:
- Interchange — paid to the customer's bank, the biggest slice.
- Scheme fees — Visa's and Mastercard's cut.
- Processor margin — your provider's markup on top.
- Cross-border and currency fees — extra whenever the customer's card is foreign or in another currency, which online means often.
Stack those up and a lot of online merchants land around 3% all-in, more on international orders. Then there's the cost that never shows on the statement: chargebacks. A disputed payment loses you the sale, the goods and a dispute fee on top — and too many of them get your account reviewed.
What a crypto payment costs
Crypto has its own costs; they're just shorter and more visible:
- Gateway fee. What you pay the service that runs the checkout, locks rates and tracks confirmations. With CryptoPayr that's volume-based, from 3% down to 1% as you grow, plus a flat $0.10 a payment.
- Network fee. The blockchain's own charge to move the coins. On a cheap network like Tron it's cents; on Ethereum at a busy moment it's more. This is usually the customer's to pay, not yours.
- Conversion, if you use it. Auto-converting takings into a stablecoin costs a small spread — the price of not holding a volatile asset. Optional.
What's not on that list is the whole point: no interchange, no scheme fees, no cross-border surcharge, and no chargebacks. The international order that costs you extra on cards costs you nothing extra in crypto.
So which is cheaper?
For a small domestic order paid with a local card, cards are fine and the gap is narrow. Crypto pulls ahead exactly where cards are most expensive and most fragile:
- International sales, where card cross-border and currency fees pile up and declines are common.
- Higher-risk or hard-to-bank industries, where card processing is expensive when you can get it at all.
- Anywhere chargebacks hurt, since crypto removes them outright.
The tiering matters over time, too: card rates tend to creep up as you grow, while CryptoPayr's rate drops as your volume rises. The busier you get, the wider the gap.
The honest take
Crypto isn't magically free — you pay a gateway, and someone pays the network. But it strips out the expensive, invisible layers that make cards add up, and it deletes chargebacks entirely. For most online businesses the right answer isn't crypto instead of cards; it's crypto as well, pointed at the orders cards handle worst. Run the numbers on your own volume and see where you land.