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Payment Gateways: Notes and Information

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Know Your Money Flow! Please read at least the first “Need to Know” section of this page prior to using FoxyCart on a live e-commerce site. Not everything with e-commerce, gateways, merchant account, and payment information is immediately obvious or well known. Really, trust us. We see stores lose sales all the time for various reasons.

Supported Gateways & Other Payment Methods

Filtered by countrie='GB'

Gateway Name Linksupports-3dsecure
WorldPay Onlineworldpay_onlinecoming soon
WorldPay (Global)worldpayyes
Trust Paymentstrust-paymentsyes
Stripe (Deprecated)stripe_deprecatedno
Stripestripeyes
Square Platformsquare_platformyes
Squaresquareyes
Sezzlesezzleyes
Realexrealexyes
Purchase Orders (offline)purchase_orders
PayPoint Gateway Freedom + IMApaypoint_gateway_freedom_imayes
PayPoint Gateway Freedompaypoint_gatewayyes
PayPal (Overview)paypal
PayPal Payments Propayments_proyes
PayPal MicroPaymentsmicropaymentsyes
PayPal Express Checkoutexpress_checkoutyes
PayPal Commerce Platformcommerce_platformyes
PaymentSensepaymentsenseyes
Pay360pay360yes
Opayo (formerly Sage Pay)opayoyes
Ogone (supports iDeal)ogoneyes
Molliemollieyes
Klarnaklarna
Global Paymentsglobal_paymentsyes
EMS Payemspayyes
DIBSdibsyes
Cybersource Magnetic Stripe Swipercybersource_magstripe_swiper
Cybersource Hostedcybersource_hostedno
Cybersourcecybersourceyes
Checkout.comcheckoutcomyes
Cardstreamcardstreamyes
Braintree Paymentsbraintreeyes
BlueSnapbluesnapyes
Barclaycard ePDQbarclaycardcoming soon
Authorize.net (AIM)authorize.netno
Adyenadyenyes
2Checkout/Verifone2checkoutyes
 

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What you NEED to KNOW

Gateways, Merchant Accounts, Bank Accounts, Oh My!

Accepting credit card payments online is more difficult than it seems it should be, and matters are complicated by new and evolving systems that not only combine previously distinct aspects but also are redefining the payment process and creating entirely new options. If you aren't already intimately familiar with how the myriad pieces of e-commerce interact please read our primer on gateways and merchant account. We'll attempt to explain what is needed and why.

CSC (CID, CVV2, etc.) Support, Requirements, and Etc.

Some FoxyCart functionality may require or allow a transaction to be processed without a Card Security Code (the “CSC”, the numbers on the back of most cards). Some gateways, however, may disallow transactions without a CSC passed through. The situations where the CSC will not be transferred to the gateway are:

If you're using this functionality we strongly recommend turning off the CSC requirements in your gateway's settings, if possible. FoxyCart will always require a CSC, so a CSC will be sent when possible, but there are certain situations where the CSCs simply might not be available (as with recurring billing / subscriptions).

Also, please note that the CSC is not allowed to be stored, per PCI DSS.

Gateways that may require additional steps or features in order to process transactions without a CSC include:

TESTING v. LIVE, Gateway Settings and Accounts

Almost every gateway provider also provides their customers with test accounts (also called development accounts or sandbox accounts) for use on the gateway's test environment. A test account will work on the test environment, but will not work on the live environment. Similarly, a live account will work on the live environment (the one that processes real transactions from real customers), but will not work on the gateway's own test environment. The two environments are generally completely separate, and any account on one will not work on the other.

To make testing easier for FoxyCart users, FoxyCart provides the ability to enter your own test account information with which to test. What is critical to understand is that, in almost all cases, a live account will not work on if the test gateway is selected in FoxyCart. FoxyCart will send the transaction to entirely separate systems based on your store's settings.

Authorization and Capture: How the Money Flows

An important but often misunderstood piece of credit card processing is the relationship between “authorization” and “capture”. The easiest way to explain it is by using a gas station as an example. You drive up to the pump and insert your credit card, at which point the card is “authorized” for (let's say) $75. This authorization checks with your bank to make sure you have the funds, just like a normal transaction, but doesn't yet charge the card (“capture the funds”), since the final dollar amount is unknown. Once you have finished pumping and the final transaction amount is known (say, $45.03), the system issues a “capture” for $45.03. The first part is an “authorization only”, or “auth-only”, transaction. The second part is the capture.

(Another option would be for the gas station (or any merchant) to authorize a small amount like $1 just to make sure that it's a valid card, then upon completion clear that auth and issue an auth+capture for the full amount in one go. That approach can be sub-optimal, though, as a $1 charge might go through fine, but a $75 charge might fail for insufficient funds. This approach also requires storing payment information in one way or another, which can lead to its own challenges.)

The other, much more common way to process transactions is to do the authorization and capture at the same time, referred to as an “auth+capture” or “auth/capture”. Imagine buying groceries: You go to checkout, the total charge is determined, and your card is charged (both auth'd and captured at the same time).

Where things get confusing is on the proper usages of an auth-only transaction. It is often thought of as a way to accept pre-orders or to handle trial billing periods. While you could use an auth-only to handle these types of charges, it might not be a great idea for a few reasons.

  • Authorizations effectively “hold” the amount authorized. So if you auth $300, that $300 is unavailable to the customer even if you haven't captured the funds. (If you don't capture and the auth expires, the funds will be released back to the customer, but in the meantime they may have overdrafted their account.)
  • Authorizations don't last forever. 3 days is probably as far as you'd want to go under normal circumstances, and 30 days appears to be the upper limit, though the exact details will depend on a number of factors, including the card type (Visa, MasterCard, AmEx, etc.).

A better use of auth-only transactions would be to handle expected variations in product delivery or final charges. For example, if your shipping charges vary by factors that FoxyCart cannot account for, or products may not be available regularly, you may want to auth-only then adjust the final transaction amount before capturing the funds. Important to note, however, is that you can never capture more than you've initially authorized when using a traditional gateway. Some gateways allow you to capture only as much as has been authorized, while others 1) may allow you to capture up to a certain percentage of the authorized amount, but not more than a certain dollar amount higher.

In most situations we strongly recommend doing an auth+capture. If you do have specific requirements that necessitate auth-only processing we encourage you to test thoroughly and keep up to date on any changes your gateway may make that impact that functionality.

Card Verification and Subsequent Auth+Captures

Foxy supports (for some gateways) the ability to verify a card with a $0 or $1 auth. (Check with your processor for the correct value to use. If you pass the wrong value, you can be hit with a small authorization misuse fee, or it can just error.) Verifications are useful for situations like…

  • Free trials on a subscription, where you want to charge the customer 7 days in the future but need to make sure their card is valid first.
  • Pre-orders. (This is a bigger topic, but it's a valid use case.)
  • Accepting transactions where you might need to adjust the final charge upwards (ie. charge more than was displayed to the customer on the checkout).

There are some downsides, though:

  • If you've selected Enabled, always and only verify, you need to capture every verified transaction manually (or build an API integration, which is definitely the better approach if you have any sort of volume). Otherwise, it will verify only $0 transactions (for example, where the transaction has future subscription start dates and are not charged on the first transaction date).
  • Just because a card verified doesn't mean it'll work for the full amount, so you'll need to also build robust procedures or automated handling of errors.

This approach is generally only recommended for advanced users who have very, very specific workflows.

Settings Summary

Here is a summary of the verification settings:

  • Disabled: Will never verify payment methods. Not recommended.
  • Enabled, automatically: Will perform a verification on zero-amount transactions when a payment method is required (such as future subscriptions). Non zero-amount transactions will be authorized or auth+captured at the full amount.
  • Always and only verify: For all transactions where a payment method is required (both zero-amount and non zero-amount), the payment method will be verified. Payment will not be collected without additional action. Only recommended in specific situations.

In all cases, a payment method will not be required for “free” transactions (assuming there is not a subscription present), such as if a coupon brings the order total to zero.

Gateway Errors and What To Do About Them

Payment errors are a fact of e-commerce life, but fear not: They're typically easy to understand once you know what you're looking for. Please read our primer on payment processing errors, because knowing is half the battle.

Requesting New Gateway Support

1)
PayPal's authorization & capture functionality

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