
Mastercard Acquirer
A Mastercard acquirer is a merchant bank or other financial institution that accepts and processes transactions made with a Mastercard. A Mastercard acquirer is a financial institution, usually a merchant bank, licensed by Mastercard to help merchants accept Mastercard payments. A request is made to the Mastercard acquirer, which in turn places a request to the card issuer — not Mastercard — to authorize the transaction. A Mastercard acquirer is a merchant bank or other financial institution that accepts and processes transactions made with a Mastercard. A Mastercard acquirer is a merchant bank or financial institution licensed to work with merchants, process and settle transactions, and resolve issues involving transactions.

What Is a Mastercard Acquirer?
A Mastercard acquirer is a merchant bank or other financial institution that accepts and processes transactions made with a Mastercard. Mastercard partners with institutions all over the world to offer Mastercard-branded payment cards.
Mastercard payment cards exclusively use its network for processing all transactions. Payment cards may be credit, debit, or prepaid cards.



Understanding Mastercard Acquirers
A Mastercard acquirer is a merchant bank or financial institution licensed to work with merchants, process and settle transactions, and resolve issues involving transactions. Acquirers work with issuers to ensure that a payment card transaction is authorized.
When a cardholder swipes a Mastercard for payment, this initiates a series of steps to authorize the transaction. A request is made to the Mastercard acquirer, which in turn places a request to the card issuer — not Mastercard — to authorize the transaction. If the cardholder's account holds sufficient funds, the card issuer sends an authorization code to the acquirer, who then authorizes the transaction to be made by the merchant.
Mastercard Acquirer Services and Fees
Mastercard acquirers provide a number of services that allow a merchant to accept Mastercard payments. The acquirer is ultimately responsible for building a PCI compliant system for managing card and financial information, which involves ensuring that transactions and card information are secure. Because the acquirer works with merchants accepting Mastercard transactions, they should ensure merchants understand how to keep transactions secure and PCI compliant.
Mastercard acquirers also work with merchants to ensure they have chosen the correct merchant level, which is based on transaction volume from the most recent 52-week period. The merchant level may change over time according to the needs of the business.
The amount a merchant receives from a credit card payment is less than the amount charged. This is because both the card issuer and Mastercard acquirer subtract service fees. The fee subtracted by the issuer is called the interchange rate, and the fee subtracted by the acquirer is called the discount rate. Mastercard also imposes an acquirer license fee that businesses must pay as part of the expense involved with credit card processing. These fees are usually calculated as a percentage of the sale plus a fixed fee. For example, 1.80% + $0.10. This ensures the issuer and acquirer receive the optimal payment amount, even if the original transaction was for a high or low dollar amount.
Mastercard interchange rates are usually updated semiannually and published on its website.
This is just one example of the variety of fees that a business pays when they accept Mastercard, or any other credit card, as payment for products or services sold.
Related terms:
American Express Card
An American Express card is an electronic payment card branded by the American Express Company. read more
Credit Card
Issued by a financial company giving the holder an option to borrow funds, credit cards charge interest and are primarily used for short-term financing. read more
Discount Rate
"Discount rate" has two distinct definitions. I can refer to the interest rate that the Federal Reserve charges banks for short-term loans, but it's also used in future cash flow analysis. read more
Foreign Transaction Fee
A foreign transaction fee is a 1%–3% charge for transactions made using a domestic payment card in a foreign country. read more
Interchange Rate
The interchange rate is a fee charged to retailers by banks for the sake of covering credit risk costs. Discover more about interchange rates here. read more
Mastercard
A Mastercard is any electronic payment card that uses the Mastercard network for processing transaction communications. read more
Merchant Bank
A merchant bank conducts underwriting, loan services, financial advising, and fundraising services for large corporations and high-net-worth individuals. read more
PCI Compliance
PCI or payment card industry compliance are the standards businesses must follow to protect credit card holder data. Learn about PCI compliance requirements. read more
Post Date
The post date is the day, month, and year when a card issuer posts a transaction and adds it to the cardholder’s account balance. read more
Sales Draft
A sales draft is a record created at the time a purchase is made, containing details of the transaction. read more