A tour operator recently told me they switched processors three times in two years. Not because of service issues or technical problems—because they couldn't figure out what they were being charged or why the numbers kept changing.
This happens constantly in the experience industry. Operators sign up with a processor, see a rate on paper, then watch their monthly statements tell a completely different story. The disconnect between quoted rates and actual costs creates a trust problem that runs deeper than dollars and cents.
Payment processor statements are often 15-20 pages of dense transaction data, fee categories, and adjustment codes. Most operators glance at the total, compare it roughly to what they expected, and file it away.
That's by design.
When pricing structures are complex enough, small increases slip through unnoticed. A few basis points here, a new "technology fee" there, an "assessment adjustment" buried on page 12. Individually, these additions seem minor. Over a season, they compound into thousands of dollars operators never budgeted for.
The activity and tour industry makes this worse because transaction patterns vary wildly. A kayak rental company processing $40 transactions has completely different interchange costs than a multi-day adventure tour charging $2,500 per person. Processors who quote a single "blended rate" are hiding the math that actually determines your costs.
Real pricing transparency isn't just about showing you a rate. It's about showing you how that rate connects to what you actually pay.
Three components matter:
Interchange fees go directly to the card-issuing bank. These are set by Visa, Mastercard, and other card brands—your processor doesn't control them. They vary based on card type (rewards cards cost more than basic debit), transaction method (card-present vs. online), and industry category. For experience businesses, interchange typically runs between 1.5% and 2.8% depending on your mix.
Assessment fees go to the card brands themselves. These are tiny—usually a fraction of a percent—but they're non-negotiable and should be passed through at cost.
Processor markup is the only part your processor actually controls. This is where pricing honesty (or dishonesty) lives. A processor quoting you "2.9% flat rate" is bundling all three components together, which means you have no idea what their actual markup is or whether interchange savings would ever benefit you.
Interchange-plus pricing separates these components. You see exactly what the card brands charge and exactly what your processor adds on top. When interchange goes down (which happens periodically), your costs go down proportionally. With flat-rate pricing, the processor keeps that savings.
Generic processors optimize for generic businesses. A coffee shop running thousands of $5 transactions has predictable, low-cost interchange. A tour operator running $500+ bookings made weeks in advance with corporate cards and international travelers has wildly different economics.
Here's what often happens:
An operator signs up with a mass-market processor advertising "simple 2.9% + 30¢" pricing. That rate sounds competitive. But their actual transaction mix includes:
By the time all the fees calculate, their effective rate is 3.4% or higher. The "simple" pricing was only simple because it hid the complexity that actually determines cost.
Operators who understand their transaction mix can negotiate smarter. But that requires a processor willing to show the breakdown—and many aren't.
When evaluating a processor (or re-evaluating your current one), these questions separate transparent partners from opaque vendors:
"Can you show me a sample statement for a business similar to mine?" Processors who value transparency will walk you through exactly how charges appear and how to verify them against your transactions.
"What's your markup separate from interchange?" If they can't answer this clearly, they're bundling costs in ways that benefit them, not you.
"How do you handle interchange downgrades?" Transactions sometimes process at higher interchange rates than expected (called downgrades) due to missing data fields or timing issues. Good processors actively monitor and minimize these. Others let them slide because they profit from the difference.
"What fees beyond processing should I expect?" PCI compliance fees, statement fees, batch fees, monthly minimums, early termination penalties—these add up. A processor who discloses everything upfront signals partnership intent. One who buries fees in contracts signals something else.
The operators who feel best about their payment costs aren't necessarily paying the lowest rates. They're the ones who understand exactly what they're paying and why.
This matters beyond the financial impact. When you can explain your payment costs to your accountant, predict your margins accurately during budgeting season, and trust that your statements reflect reality—operations get simpler. You stop second-guessing. You stop switching processors hoping the next one will be more honest.
Payments infrastructure should feel like a solved problem, not an ongoing source of uncertainty. When pricing is genuinely transparent, operators can focus on running tours instead of auditing statements.
The trust gap closes when the math is visible. Not because operators want to become payment experts—but because they deserve to understand where their money goes.
Payments Made Simple. Experiences Made Unforgettable.
ActivityPay is a vertically focused payments and commerce partner built for the activity and experiences economy.
Reno, Nevada
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