Payment Processing for Travel Businesses

$21B Hotel Processing Spend
$561B OTA Market (2026)
$450 Avg Chargeback Cost
74% Abandon Without APM
Sources: Payrails 2025 · Mordor Intelligence 2025 · Chargeflow 2025

Market Verdict: Payment Processing for Travel

Hotels alone spend $21 billion annually on payment processing with average card fees of 2–3% (Payrails, 2025). The online travel agency market is valued at $561.30 billion in 2026, projected to reach $761.33 billion by 2031 at 6.29% CAGR (Mordor Intelligence, 2025) — every dollar of that volume flows through a payment gateway. But growth comes with friction: hotels lose $1.5 billion annually to inefficient reconciliation, chargebacks cost operators an average of $450 per dispute (3.75x the transaction value), and 74% of end clients abandon bookings when their preferred payment method is unavailable. For tour operators, DMCs, and travel agencies, payment processing is no longer a back-office function — it is a revenue lever.

$21BHotel Processing Spend
$561BOTA Market (2026)
$450Avg Chargeback Cost
74%APM Abandonment

What Is Payment Processing and Why It Matters for Travel Businesses

Payment processing for travel is the infrastructure that moves money between your client’s bank and yours — gateway selection, acquiring, settlement, currency conversion, and refund flows. For tour operators, DMCs, and travel agencies, it is more complex than standard e-commerce because travel transactions carry structural risks that most retail businesses never face.

Travel businesses operate with advance purchases: a client pays a deposit months before departure, with balance due 30–90 days before travel. Inbound operators accept payments from 10 or more source markets, requiring multi-currency handling by default. Average transaction values range from $500 to $5,000+, far above the e-commerce median. Cancellation and refund exposure creates chargeback risk that acquirers and card networks monitor closely. And the regulatory overlay — PCI DSS, PSD2/SCA for EU transactions, AML/KYC — adds compliance requirements that grow with each new market you serve.

Hotels spend $21 billion annually on processing with average card fees of 2–3% (Payrails, 2025). Tour operators, DMCs, and activity providers face the same cost structure at smaller scale, often without the negotiated rates that hotel chains command.

Payment processing is not a commodified utility for travel businesses — it is a competitive differentiator when you serve international clients across multiple currencies and regulatory regimes. This guide, part of the Technology for Travel guide, provides a vendor-neutral framework for selecting, implementing, and optimizing your payment infrastructure.

Current State of Payment Processing in the Travel Industry

Market Scale and Growth

Hotels spend $21 billion annually on payment processing, with average card fees of 2–3% (Payrails, 2025). Tour operators, DMCs, and activity providers face the same fee structure at smaller scale, often without the negotiated rates that hotel chains command. The online travel agency market was valued at $561.30 billion in 2026, projected to reach $761.33 billion by 2031 at 6.29% CAGR (Mordor Intelligence, 2025). Every dollar of that volume flows through a payment gateway.

Cross-Border Volume Is the New Normal

Cross-border payment volume now exceeds 2019 levels by wide margins: +141% for Visa and +155% for Mastercard (Payrails, 2025). For inbound tour operators and DMCs serving international source markets, multi-currency processing is not an upgrade — it is baseline infrastructure. 91% of clients want to pay in their home currency (Payrails, 2025). An operator who forces all clients into a single currency at checkout is creating friction where none needs to exist.

Alternative Payment Methods Are Non-Negotiable

74% of end clients abandon bookings if their preferred alternative payment method (APM) is unavailable (Payrails, 2025). Note: this stat describes the behavior of the end clients that travel operators serve — the people booking tours, transfers, and experiences. For operators, the implication is direct: missing APMs translate to lost revenue. 1 in 5 US-based clients now use buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) to book, and BNPL increases average order value by up to 60% (Payrails, 2025). Source-market preferences vary dramatically: iDEAL (Netherlands), Bancontact (Belgium), PIX (Brazil), Alipay and WeChat Pay (China). Operators serving 5+ source markets with cards only are leaving revenue on the table.

Fraud and Chargebacks — the Hidden Margin Killer

Travel fraud losses reached $21 billion globally (CrossClassify, citing Juniper Research 2023 — this is the most recent global figure available; no 2025 update has been published). Card-not-present fraud accounts for 65% of hospitality fraud losses (Payrails, 2025). Global chargebacks are projected at 261 million in 2025, rising to 324 million by 2028 (Chargeback.io, citing Mastercard/Datos Insights, 2025).

The travel chargeback rate requires careful reading. Chargeback.io reports 0.15% in Q2 2025. Chargeflow (2025) documented an 816% surge to 0.916% in 2024, driven by post-pandemic cancellation disputes. The two sources likely use different merchant samples and measurement windows. The most defensible interpretation: travel chargebacks spiked dramatically in 2024 from cancellation backlog and appear to have normalized by mid-2025. Both figures remain below the 1% threshold that triggers card network monitoring programs, but the cost per dispute is what matters at the operator level.

The average travel chargeback value is $120, but the all-in cost per dispute reaches approximately $450 — a 3.75x multiplier that includes representment labor, lost merchandise, and card network fees (Chargeflow, 2025). More broadly, merchants lose $4.61 for every $1 of fraud in 2025 (Chargeback.io, citing LexisNexis). US merchants win only 54% of chargebacks they contest, dropping to just 17.1% for fraud-related disputes (Chargeback.io, 2025).

Adyen processed approximately $1.6 trillion in global payment volume in 2025, with platform fraud losses declining 20% year-on-year (Adyen Fraud Report, 2026 — vendor-sourced data). The gap between enterprise fraud prevention and the tools available to mid-market operators represents both a risk and an opportunity for platform selection.

Key Strategies and Best Practices

This framework covers six evaluation criteria that match a payment gateway to your business model, not generic feature checklists. All top search results for “payment processing for travel” are vendor pitches — this is the operator’s decision framework.

1

Match Gateway to Business Model

A DMC handling high-value, low-volume bookings with multi-supplier payouts has fundamentally different gateway requirements than an activity operator processing low-value, high-volume transactions with instant confirmation. An OTA running a marketplace needs split payments and hold-and-release settlement. Each model demands different capabilities for split settlements, hold periods, and payout timing. Start by mapping your transaction flow — deposit structures, supplier payment timing, refund frequency — before evaluating features.

2

Build for Multi-Currency from Day One

91% of clients want to pay in their home currency (Payrails, 2025). Cross-border volume is up 141–155% vs 2019 levels. Your gateway must support dynamic currency conversion (DCC) or multi-currency pricing natively. Not all gateways handle this equally — some charge 1–2% on top of the conversion spread, which erodes the margin benefit. Evaluate the total cost of multi-currency processing, not just whether the feature exists.

3

Implement a Chargeback Prevention Discipline

US merchants win only 54% of chargebacks they fight, and just 17.1% for fraud-related disputes (Chargeback.io, 2025). Prevention is far more cost-effective than representment. Key practices: display clear cancellation policies pre-purchase, send booking confirmation and reminder emails, implement 3D Secure 2 for all EU transactions (PSD2/SCA requirement, Paysafe), and use clear billing descriptors so clients recognize the charge on their statement.

4

Accept Alternative Payment Methods Strategically

74% abandon without preferred APM; BNPL increases average order value by up to 60% (Payrails, 2025). Prioritize by source market: iDEAL (Netherlands), Bancontact (Belgium), Alipay and WeChat Pay (China), PIX (Brazil). Do not add every APM your gateway offers — add the ones your clients actually use. Analyze your booking data by source country and map the dominant payment method in each. A DMC serving German and Dutch source markets should prioritize Sofort and iDEAL before considering Alipay. For operators with booking form optimization in place, APM availability becomes the next highest-impact conversion lever.

5

Automate Reconciliation

Staff spend 7 hours per week on manual payment matching. Hotels lose $1.5 billion annually to inefficient reconciliation (Payrails, 2025). Modern gateways — Stripe, Adyen, Checkout.com — offer automated reconciliation APIs that match incoming payments to bookings without human intervention. For a 10-person DMC, saving 7 hours/week of manual reconciliation at $25/hour represents $9,100 in annual labor cost. That single feature can offset the difference between a cheap gateway and a capable one.

6

Plan Deposit and Milestone Payment Flows

Travel is advance-purchase: deposits (10–30%) at booking, balance due 30–90 days before departure. Your gateway must support split or staged payments. Stripe and Adyen handle this natively. PayPal does not manage staged payments well. If your booking engine determines the checkout flow, your payment gateway must integrate with its deposit and balance collection logic. Mismatched systems create manual workarounds that scale poorly.

Before choosing your payment gateway, answer these 6 questions:

  1. What is your average transaction value and monthly processing volume?
  2. How many source markets do you serve, and what are the dominant payment methods in each?
  3. Does your business model require deposit collection and staged balance payments?
  4. Do you need split settlements for supplier payouts?
  5. What is your current chargeback rate, and do you have a representment process?
  6. Does your booking engine support BYO gateway integration or require a bundled processor?

Tools and Platforms

This comparison evaluates eight payment gateways against B2B criteria specific to travel operators. Processing fees vary by volume, risk profile, and negotiation — they typically range from 1.5–3.5% for travel merchants. We omit pricing because published rates are unreliable at the operator level; your negotiated rate depends on volume, chargeback history, and merchant risk classification.

Payment Gateway Comparison for Travel Businesses (May 2026)
Gateway Best For Currencies Travel Features Fraud Protection Tier
Stripe Mid-market, developer-first 135+ Embedded payments, Connect for marketplaces, staged payments Radar AI Mid-market
Adyen Enterprise OTAs, airlines Global $1.6T volume, Uplift fraud suite, 20% fraud reduction AI-powered Enterprise
Nuvei (fmr SafeCharge) Mid-to-large OTAs, EU/Asia/LATAM Global Travel-specific chargeback mgmt, strong EU acquiring Travel-tuned Mid-enterprise
Flywire High-value international 140+ Payments >$1,000, bank reconciliation Specialized Niche
PayPal Small operators, brand trust 25+ Buyer protection, easy integration Standard SMB
Rapyd Multi-market, 900+ APMs Global Local APM breadth, emerging markets Standard Mid-market
Checkout.com Performance-focused travel Global Auth rate optimization, travel data models AI-powered Enterprise
Trust My Travel Travel compliance, financial protection Limited ATOL-adjacent protection, supplier payments Travel-specific SMB-Mid

Tier guidance: Solo activity operator → PayPal or Stripe. Multi-destination DMC → Stripe or Nuvei. Enterprise OTA → Adyen or Checkout.com. This is an evaluation framework, not a recommendation — gateway selection must account for your booking engine integration, your source markets, and your average transaction value.

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Mistake 1: Treating Payment Processing as a Commodity

Choosing the cheapest gateway without evaluating multi-currency support, chargeback management tools, or reconciliation automation. Hotels lose 0.8–2% of room revenue to OTA and payments friction (Payrails, 2025). The hidden costs — manual reconciliation, chargeback losses, currency conversion spreads — often exceed the fee savings.

Fix: Model total cost of ownership: processing fees + chargeback losses + reconciliation labor + currency conversion spreads. A gateway that costs 0.3% more but automates reconciliation and reduces chargebacks may save 1–2% net.

Mistake 2: Ignoring the High-Risk Merchant Classification

Travel operators are frequently classified as high-risk merchants by acquirers due to advance purchases, high chargeback exposure, and cancellation volatility. This affects your approval odds, reserve requirements, and processing fees. Many operators discover this classification only when they apply for a merchant account and face unexpected reserves or rejections.

Fix: Disclose your business model proactively to acquirers. Maintain chargeback rates below 0.65% (Visa threshold). Choose gateways with travel-industry experience — Nuvei, Trust My Travel, and Adyen have dedicated travel verticals that understand the risk profile.

Mistake 3: Failing to Implement 3D Secure 2 for EU Transactions

PSD2 mandates Strong Customer Authentication (SCA) for EU online payments (Paysafe). Non-compliance means declined transactions, not just regulatory risk. IATA mandates PCI DSS for all accredited travel agents; non-compliance risks loss of card acceptance or business termination. Security & Compliance for Travel Technology (coming soon) covers the full regulatory landscape.

Fix: Enable 3D Secure 2 for all EU-originating transactions. Most modern gateways (Stripe, Adyen, Checkout.com) handle SCA routing automatically. Verify your gateway’s SCA compliance before accepting EU payments.

Mistake 4: Not Planning for Chargeback Seasonality

Chargebacks spike 60–120 days after peak travel. Q4–Q1 is chargeback season for summer travel disputes. Operators who do not budget for this or maintain evidence packs lose by default.

Fix: Build an evidence pack for every booking at confirmation: terms acceptance screenshot, IP address, correspondence, clear cancellation policy acknowledgment. Flag your peak-travel months and budget for chargeback volumes 60–120 days later. For trust signal best practices that reduce disputes before they start, see the trust signals guide.

Mistake 5: Offering Only Card Payments to International Clients

Source-market payment preferences vary dramatically: iDEAL (Netherlands), Bancontact (Belgium), PIX (Brazil), Alipay (China). An operator serving 5+ source markets with cards only is losing conversions at checkout.

Fix: Analyze your booking data by source country. Add the dominant local payment method for your top 3–5 markets. Rapyd offers 900+ local payment methods; Stripe covers 135+ currencies. Do not add every APM — add the ones your clients actually use.

How Payment Processing Connects to Your Growth Stack

Payment processing sits at the intersection of booking infrastructure and financial operations. It is the financial nervous system of your technology stack: your booking engine triggers the charge, your CMS renders the payment form, security governs data handling, analytics measures conversion, and supplier management determines payout flows.

The critical connection points for travel operators:

  • Booking Engine Selection — your gateway must integrate with your booking engine’s checkout flow. Bundled vs BYO gateway decisions directly affect payment flexibility and fee negotiation power.
  • Website Platform & CMS — your CMS determines how payment forms render and which gateway plugins or SDKs are available. WordPress, headless, and custom builds each have different integration patterns.
  • Security & Compliance for Travel Technology (coming soon) — PCI DSS, PSD2/SCA, and GDPR all directly govern payment data handling. Your compliance posture constrains your gateway options.
  • Analytics & Tracking for Travel (coming soon) — payment conversion rates, checkout abandonment funnels, and revenue attribution require gateway-level data feeds.
  • OTA Integration & Channel Management (coming soon) — OTA payment flows vs direct payment flows have different margin structures and settlement timelines.
  • Supplier Management Systems for Travel (coming soon) — supplier payout timing and currency affect your cash flow. Multi-currency payouts to suppliers require gateway support or treasury management tools.

This guide is part of the Technology for Travel pillar. Every technology decision you make — from booking engine to CRM — affects how money moves through your operation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

It depends on your business model and processing volume. Mid-market operators with development resources: Stripe (135+ currencies, developer-friendly APIs, Connect for marketplace payouts). EU-focused DMCs needing strong acquiring and travel-specific chargeback management: Nuvei. Enterprise OTAs processing high volume: Adyen ($1.6 trillion in 2025 volume, AI-powered fraud suite with 20% year-on-year fraud reduction). Small activity operators prioritizing ease of setup: PayPal. Match gateway to your booking engine integration requirements and source-market payment preferences.

Four structural factors: advance purchases (deposits collected months before service delivery), high chargeback exposure from cancellations and itinerary changes, high average transaction values ($500–$5,000+), and seasonal volume spikes that create irregular processing patterns. This classification affects approval odds with acquirers, may trigger reserve requirements (typically 5–10% of processing volume held for 6 months), and increases processing fees. Operators can mitigate by maintaining chargeback rates below 0.65% and choosing gateways with travel-industry verticals.

Q2 2025 data shows 0.15% (Chargeback.io). The rate spiked to 0.916% in 2024 due to post-pandemic cancellation dispute backlog (Chargeflow, 2025) but appears to have normalized. The two sources use different merchant samples, so treat them as a range rather than a precise trend line. What matters more: the average chargeback cost is $450 per dispute at 3.75x the $120 average transaction value. Even at 0.15%, an operator processing $2 million annually faces ~$13,500 in chargeback costs. See the full analysis in the Current State section above.

Yes. IATA mandates PCI DSS for all accredited travel agents. Non-compliance risks card scheme fines, loss of card acceptance, or business termination. Even non-IATA operators who handle card data must comply. The practical solution: most modern gateways handle PCI compliance for you via hosted payment pages or tokenization — Stripe, Adyen, and Checkout.com all offer PCI-compliant checkout flows that shift the compliance burden to the processor. Security & Compliance for Travel Technology (coming soon) covers the full regulatory framework.

Prioritize by source market. 74% of end clients abandon without their preferred APM (Payrails, 2025). Key APMs by market: iDEAL (Netherlands, 60%+ e-commerce share), Bancontact (Belgium), PIX (Brazil), Alipay and WeChat Pay (China). BNPL increases average order value by up to 60% and 1 in 5 US-based clients already use it for travel bookings. Do not add every APM your gateway offers — analyze your booking data by source country, identify the top 3–5 markets, and add the dominant local method for each.

Your gateway must support split or staged payments: deposit (10–30%) at booking, balance due 30–90 days before departure. Stripe, Adyen, and Nuvei all support this natively through their APIs. PayPal does not handle staged payments well — it is designed for single-transaction flows. The critical integration point is your booking engine: it must trigger the deposit charge at checkout and schedule the balance collection automatically. Mismatched systems create manual follow-ups that scale poorly past 50 bookings per month.

Prevention over cure — merchants win only 54% of chargebacks they fight (Chargeback.io, 2025). Five practices that matter: (1) display clear cancellation policies pre-purchase and require explicit acceptance, (2) implement 3D Secure 2 for all EU transactions (PSD2 requirement — shifts fraud liability to the card issuer), (3) send booking confirmation + reminder emails with itinerary details and billing descriptor, (4) use billing descriptors your clients will recognize (not your holding company name), and (5) maintain evidence packs for every booking — terms acceptance, correspondence, IP logs. Budget for seasonal chargeback spikes: disputes peak 60–120 days after peak travel. Summer bookings generate Q4–Q1 chargebacks.

Data Sources & Methodology

Primary sources, all verified May 2026:

All statistics verified via direct page fetch on 2026-05-27 except Mastercard (BOT_BLOCKED — manual browser verification required). Market sizing reflects research-firm estimates; payment gateway features verified against vendor documentation as of May 2026.

This article was produced with AI assistance and verified by the AtlasPerk research team. Read our methodology →

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