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We all pay with bank cards from time to time. Moreover, contactless payments are increasingly being introduced into the life of a modern person (for example, PayPass technology). It is an excellent alternative to cash, allowing consumers who do not have banknotes or coins with them at the moment to make a variety of purchases.
When a person pays, for example, in a supermarket, there may be an inscription on the check concerning the commission of the acquiring bank. The acquiring bank is also mentioned in the instructions for bank cards. It will be useful for owners of credit and debit cards to replenish their knowledge box with this concept, which is the main link in the chain of cashless payments between the cardholder and the bank that issued it.
Acquiring bank. What is it?
Acquiring bank is a bank that organizes automated points for accepting plastic bank cards. For this purpose, a credit institution (acquiring bank) uses terminals and ATMs. But the installation of a terminal for accepting cards is far from the only operation carried out by this credit institution with the "acquirer" prefix. Such a bank performs a full range of financial transactions reflecting settlements and payments by bank cards.
Acquiring bank functions
The list of basic operations for which the acquiring bank is responsible includes:
Thus, an acquiring bank is a financial institution that conducts payments to bank cards. These banks own a processing server associated with the most popular closed banking networks. A similar server is used by the institution to authorize the product (card), after which the payment occurs.
The essence of acquiring by examples
To understand the whole essence of acquiring, you will have to touch upon another component of the payment process, we are talking about the issuing bank, which directly issues and services a bank card.
For a better understanding, let's simplify the concepts of an acquiring bank and an issuing bank: the acquirer owns a terminal or an ATM in which the cards are serviced, and the issuer issues these same cards; the issuer controls all operations on the card issued by it, and the acquirer serves the customer-customer at the moment when he performs operations with the card.
It is quite possible that one financial institution was both an acquirer and an issuer at the same time.
For example, if you are a holder of a bank card and want to withdraw funds from it at an ATM of this bank, then in this case bank will be both the issuing bank and the acquiring bank.
Another example, if you have a bank card (and bank does not have its own ATM network at all) and you withdraw money from a bank ATM, then bank in this case is the acquiring bank, and bank is the issuing bank.
What happens in this case.
When you make a payment using a bank card, the bank that accepts payments at the merchant (acquiring bank) receives your card details, then it makes a request to authorize the required amount for the purchase and transmits this data through the payment system (usually Visa or MasterCard ) to the bank that issued your card (issuing bank). The issuing bank checks the bank card (its validity period, is it blocked, the availability of the required amount on the card account) and confirms the authorization or refuses it. All this happens in a few seconds (although it happens that this time stretches for minutes) and is done automatically.
It is when you withdraw money from an ATM other than your bank that you are charged a commission - this is the payment for acquiring services. At the same time, the commission for paying by credit card or payment card in the store is not charged from the buyer (this is already a condition of payment systems), this burden falls on the issuing bank. You can learn more about the acquiring service in this article.
When a person pays, for example, in a supermarket, there may be an inscription on the check concerning the commission of the acquiring bank. The acquiring bank is also mentioned in the instructions for bank cards. It will be useful for owners of credit and debit cards to replenish their knowledge box with this concept, which is the main link in the chain of cashless payments between the cardholder and the bank that issued it.
Acquiring bank. What is it?
Acquiring bank is a bank that organizes automated points for accepting plastic bank cards. For this purpose, a credit institution (acquiring bank) uses terminals and ATMs. But the installation of a terminal for accepting cards is far from the only operation carried out by this credit institution with the "acquirer" prefix. Such a bank performs a full range of financial transactions reflecting settlements and payments by bank cards.
Acquiring bank functions
The list of basic operations for which the acquiring bank is responsible includes:
- mandatory card authorization;
- processing incoming requests via the map;
- when paying with a plastic card, the acquirer guarantees the transfer of funds to the current account of the outlet where the purchase was made;
- the acquiring bank deals with all-round processing of documents (both paper type and electronic), which confirm the transaction using the card.
Thus, an acquiring bank is a financial institution that conducts payments to bank cards. These banks own a processing server associated with the most popular closed banking networks. A similar server is used by the institution to authorize the product (card), after which the payment occurs.
The essence of acquiring by examples
To understand the whole essence of acquiring, you will have to touch upon another component of the payment process, we are talking about the issuing bank, which directly issues and services a bank card.
For a better understanding, let's simplify the concepts of an acquiring bank and an issuing bank: the acquirer owns a terminal or an ATM in which the cards are serviced, and the issuer issues these same cards; the issuer controls all operations on the card issued by it, and the acquirer serves the customer-customer at the moment when he performs operations with the card.
It is quite possible that one financial institution was both an acquirer and an issuer at the same time.
For example, if you are a holder of a bank card and want to withdraw funds from it at an ATM of this bank, then in this case bank will be both the issuing bank and the acquiring bank.
Another example, if you have a bank card (and bank does not have its own ATM network at all) and you withdraw money from a bank ATM, then bank in this case is the acquiring bank, and bank is the issuing bank.
What happens in this case.
When you make a payment using a bank card, the bank that accepts payments at the merchant (acquiring bank) receives your card details, then it makes a request to authorize the required amount for the purchase and transmits this data through the payment system (usually Visa or MasterCard ) to the bank that issued your card (issuing bank). The issuing bank checks the bank card (its validity period, is it blocked, the availability of the required amount on the card account) and confirms the authorization or refuses it. All this happens in a few seconds (although it happens that this time stretches for minutes) and is done automatically.
It is when you withdraw money from an ATM other than your bank that you are charged a commission - this is the payment for acquiring services. At the same time, the commission for paying by credit card or payment card in the store is not charged from the buyer (this is already a condition of payment systems), this burden falls on the issuing bank. You can learn more about the acquiring service in this article.