Issuers vs. Acquirers
Concept
In every card payment, two key financial institutions sit on opposite sides of the transaction:
- Issuer → the customer’s bank (provides the card)
- Acquirer → the merchant’s bank or payment processor (enables the merchant to accept cards)
In simple terms:
The issuer represents the customer’s money
The acquirer represents the merchant’s access to that money
Every payment is a coordinated interaction between these two sides.
Framework — The Two-Sided Payment Model
Think of card payments as a bridge between two parties:
Customer (Cardholder)
│
Issuer
│
Card Network
│
Acquirer
│
Merchant
Roles Explained
- Issuer (Customer Side)
The issuer is the bank that gave the customer their card.
It is responsible for:
- approving or declining transactions
- holding customer funds or issuing credit
- performing fraud checks
- enforcing spending rules
Examples: Barclays, HSBC, Revolut, Chase
- Acquirer (Merchant Side)
The acquirer enables the merchant to accept card payments.
It is responsible for:
- receiving payment requests
- forwarding transactions to networks
- settling funds to the merchant
- managing merchant risk
Examples: Stripe (acting as an acquirer/processor), Adyen, Worldpay
- The Network (Connector Layer)
The card network (Visa, Mastercard, etc.) connects issuers and acquirers.
It:
- routes authorization requests
- standardizes communication
- helps coordinate settlement
Example — Real SMB Scenario
A customer buys a £60 product from an online store.
- The customer uses a card issued by HSBC → this is the issuer
- The merchant uses Stripe as its payment provider → acting as the acquirer
What happens:
- The payment request is sent
- Stripe (acquirer) forwards it through Visa
- Visa sends it to HSBC (issuer)
- HSBC decides:
- approve ✅ or decline ❌
- Response returns instantly to the merchant
Later:
- HSBC sends the money
- Stripe settles it to the merchant
Impact — Why This Matters
Understanding issuers and acquirers changes how you interpret payment behaviour.
- Who Controls Approval? The Issuer
If a payment is declined:
- it is almost always the issuer’s decision
- not your PSP or checkout system
This means:
- improving authorization rates often requires working around issuer behaviour
- retries, alternative methods, and customer prompts matter
- Who Controls Your Payouts? The Acquirer
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