How Payment Processing Works
How Payment Processing Works
Understanding the basics of how card payments flow helps you troubleshoot issues and answer customer questions.Test
The Payment Flow
Authorization — When the customer swipes, taps, or enters their card, NMI asks the card issuer (the customer's bank) if the card is valid and has enough funds. The bank responds with "approved" or "declined."
Capture — Once authorized, the funds are "captured" — this means the money is earmarked to move from the customer's account to yours. In CloudFFL, this happens automatically when the payment is confirmed.
Settlement — At the end of the day (or on a schedule), NMI settles all captured transactions. The money moves from the customers' banks to your merchant account, minus processing fees.
Key Terms
Term | What It Means |
|---|
Authorization | Bank approves the charge (money is held but not yet moved) |
Capture | The charge is finalized and queued for settlement |
Settlement | Money actually transfers to your bank account |
Void | Cancel a transaction before it settles (no charge to customer) |
Refund | Return money after settlement (takes 3-5 business days) |
Decline | Bank rejected the transaction (insufficient funds, fraud hold, etc.) |
Processing Fees
Every card payment has a processing fee, typically a percentage of the transaction plus a flat per-transaction fee (e.g., 2.9% + $0.30). These fees are set by your NMI merchant agreement and vary by card type.
Tip: Settlement usually happens overnight. If a customer asks "when will I see the charge?" — authorization shows immediately, but the final charge appears after settlement (1-2 business days).