
Ask ten Canadian small business owners what they pay in card processing fees, and nine will give you a number that’s wrong. Not because they’re careless. Because the fee structure is built to be hard to read.
Statements arrive monthly with line items labelled “non-qualified discount rate,” “PCI non-compliance fee,” and “interchange differential.” Card-not-present surcharges hide on page four. Terminal lease fees sit on a different bill entirely. The number on the marketing page rarely matches the number on the bank statement.
This guide cuts through that. Here’s what Canadian merchants actually pay to accept card payments in 2026, what’s hiding in your effective rate, and how to figure out whether your current setup is fair, expensive, or quietly bleeding you.
Almost every Canadian card payment falls into one of three categories. Knowing which one applies to which transaction is the first step in understanding your real cost.
This is the workhorse rate. It covers in-person tap, insert, and swipe transactions on Canadian debit cards (routed through Interac) and Visa/Mastercard credit cards. Most Canadian processors price these as a percentage plus a flat per-transaction fee.
In-person rates in 2026 typically fall between 2.4 and 2.9 percent plus $0.10 to $0.30 per transaction. Final transparently charges 2.49% + $0.20 across this entire tier, applied identically to Interac debit and Visa/Mastercard credit, in-person.
Two things drive the cost difference between merchants on identical contracts: card mix (premium reward cards carry higher underlying interchange than basic consumer cards) and average ticket size (the flat fee is more punishing on a $4 coffee than a $400 sectional).
Any transaction where the card isn’t physically present at a terminal costs more. That includes:
The premium exists because card-not-present transactions carry more fraud risk and weaker chargeback protection. The cardholder isn’t physically present, the chip isn’t read, and the merchant absorbs more liability if a transaction is disputed.
Most processors charge an extra 0.3 to 1.5 percent for card-not-present, often buried inside the statement as a separate “non-qualified” tier rather than disclosed as an explicit add-on. Final charges a flat +0.41% on top of the base rate for card-not-present transactions, listed openly on the pricing page rather than hidden in a tier table.
If your business takes deposits over the phone, sends invoices via payment links, or sells online, this matters. For a contractor running 30 percent of volume through phone-in deposits, a hidden 1.0 percent card-not-present surcharge translates to thousands of dollars per year that doesn’t show up in any pitch deck.
Amex is the outlier. Historically Amex set its own merchant rates and ran on its own network, with rates often 0.5 to 1.5 percentage points above Visa and Mastercard. Programs like OptBlue have narrowed the gap, but Amex remains the most expensive card type in nearly every merchant agreement.
In Canada in 2026, Amex rates commonly land between 3.4 and 3.9 percent plus a flat fee. Some processors absorb the difference; others surcharge merchants directly for the spread without explaining it. Final charges a flat +1% on top of the base rate for Amex, listed openly. If a customer pays with an Amex card on a card-not-present transaction, both surcharges apply transparently: base rate + 1% Amex + 0.41% card-not-present.
This is the opposite of how most processors handle it. The norm is to bury Amex spread inside a “non-qualified” or “premium” interchange tier and let the merchant figure out the bill at month-end. Final lists the add-ons. You always know what you’re paying before the transaction clears.
The percentage on your contract is the cost of moving money. Everything else is layered on top. This is where traditional POS providers make most of their margin.
Most legacy POS systems charge $69 to $200 per terminal per month for software access. For a single-location café with two terminals, that’s $1,650 to $4,800 per year before a single transaction is processed. Multi-location operators see this multiply sharply.
Final charges $0 in monthly software fees. The transaction rate is the entire price. We’ll get to why this is especially valuable for seasonal businesses below.
Payment terminals are often leased, not bought. Lease contracts run two to four years at $25 to $80 per month per device. Over a four-year lease, a $40 monthly fee adds up to nearly $1,900 for a terminal that retails for under $400.
PCI compliance is real and required. The fee charged for it often isn’t proportional to the work done. Many processors bill $10 to $30 per month per location for PCI program access, plus a $100 to $300 annual “non-compliance” penalty if paperwork lapses. Read your contract for both line items.
Every time your terminal closes its batch (usually nightly), some processors charge a $0.10 to $0.25 batch fee. Multiply by 365 days. Over a year, that’s $36 to $91 per terminal you’ll never see itemized in your marketing materials.
Paper statement fees, “regulatory” fees, “network access” fees, and the catch-all “interchange differential” line items vary by processor but collectively add another $5 to $40 per month per merchant.
Add it all up. A two-terminal café paying a headline rate of 2.6 percent plus $0.10 can easily be paying an effective rate of 3.1 to 3.6 percent once these costs are spread across volume.
Newfoundland is full of seasonal operators. Tour companies, ice cream shops, summer markets, festival vendors, holiday pop-ups, bait-and-tackle shops, summer-only patios. Five months of volume, seven months of quiet.
Legacy POS contracts don’t care. Monthly software fees, PCI fees, terminal lease payments, and statement fees keep coming whether you’re processing transactions or not. For a five-month operator paying $150 per terminal per month plus $40 in ancillary fees, that’s nearly $1,400 in fixed costs during the off-season, paid for software nobody is using.
Final’s transaction-only model means seasonal operators pay exactly what they process. If a tour operator runs $30k through the system in July and $0 in February, the February bill is $0. No “system access fee.” No “PCI maintenance.” Nothing.
For a seasonal business doing $80k to $150k in annual card volume, this single difference is often worth $1,000 to $3,000 a year.
Headline rates aren’t the only place legacy POS providers hide costs. The other place is feature gating.
Most modern POS platforms charge a base subscription that includes only the basics, then upsell “apps” or “integrations” to unlock things merchants actually need. Gift cards: typically $9 to $30 per month. Loyalty programs: $25 to $100 per month. Advanced reporting and analytics: $20 to $80 per month. Multi-location consolidation: often a higher subscription tier entirely.
Shopify POS, Square, and Lightspeed all run variations of this playbook. The headline price gets you in the door. The full feature set costs two to three times more.
Final includes gift cards, loyalty programs, and advanced reporting at no additional cost, with many more included features being released weekly. They’re part of the core platform, not separately priced extensions. For most merchants, that’s another $50 to $200 in monthly fees that vanish from the bill entirely.
Stop comparing headline rates. Start calculating effective rates. The math is straightforward.
Step 1: Pull your last three months of merchant statements. Add up total card volume processed.
Step 2: Add up every cost on those statements. Processing fees, monthly fees, terminal leases, PCI fees, batch fees, statement fees, app subscriptions, anything labelled “assessment” or “regulatory.” Everything.
Step 3: Divide total costs by total volume. That’s your effective rate.
Worked example. A seasonal ice cream shop on the Newfoundland coast operates May through September. Five months of $22,000 in monthly card volume, seven months of effectively nothing. Annual card volume: $110,000. Mix across the season: 90 percent in-person (Interac and Visa/Mastercard), 5 percent Amex, 5 percent card-not-present (phone deposits for catering bookings).
| Cost type (annual) | Legacy POS | Final |
|---|---|---|
| Processing fees (blended) | ~$3,300 | ~$3,250 |
| Software subscription ($120/mo × 12) | $1,440 | $0 |
| Terminal lease ($45/mo × 12) | $540 | $0 |
| PCI program fee ($15/mo × 12) | $180 | $0 |
| Gift card app ($25/mo × 12) | $300 | $0 |
| Loyalty extension ($50/mo × 12) | $600 | $0 |
| Statement and batch fees | ~$120 | $0 |
| Total annual cost | ~$6,480 | ~$3,250 |
| Effective rate | 5.89% | 2.95% |
Same volume. Roughly half the cost. The difference isn’t the processing rate. It’s everything stacked on top.
Run this exercise on your own statements before you talk to any new provider. Need help? Reach out to us and we will calculate it for you.
Stripe powers the underlying payment processing. Final is the platform sitting on top: the till interface, inventory, reporting, customer-facing display, and the merchant-facing tools.
The pricing card is published in full:
That’s the entire price card. No second invoice. Add-ons are listed, not hidden in interchange tiers.
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