Every time a member gives through a card, your church pays a processing fee. Most finance committees treat that fee as a cost of doing business — unavoidable, not worth revisiting. That's usually a mistake.
The gap between the worst and best merchant services for churches can run thousands of dollars per year. And for churches that care about alignment between operations and mission, there's a second question worth asking: where does that fee money actually go?
This guide covers what church payment processing rates actually look like in 2026, what your finance committee needs to evaluate, and what the "mission-aligned processor" category actually means — and doesn't mean.
What Christian Payment Processing Actually Means
The term "Christian payment processor" gets used loosely. Here's what it means at minimum — and what it should mean:
At minimum: A processor that offers nonprofit rate structures and understands church accounting. This is mostly about pricing — churches qualify for a lower Merchant Category Code (MCC 8661 for religious organizations) that triggers reduced rates from card networks.
What it should mean: A company whose fee structure intentionally extends your ministry's values — not just a church-friendly rate on a generic processor. If your church's mission includes caring for vulnerable people, your payment processor should too.
The practical difference: a generic processor routes your fees to investors and operating costs. A mission-aligned processor takes a portion of those fees and donates them to the causes your congregation already cares about. That's the real difference — and it's the one worth evaluating.
"A church payment processor that calls itself Christian but sends your fees to Wall Street investors isn't aligned with your mission — it's using your mission as a marketing label."
Understanding Your Church's Payment Processing Rates
Church payment processing rates vary more than most administrators realize. The rates you see quoted — 2.6%, 2.9%, 3.0% — often have little relationship to what your church actually pays, because of how card network pricing works.
How card processing pricing actually works
The rate you see quoted is rarely a flat percentage. Most processors use "interchange-plus" or "tiered" pricing models. In a tiered model, your church pays the same rate regardless of card type — but the rate has already factored in a markup that hides the real cost. In interchange-plus, you see the actual network cost plus a transparent markup.
For churches, the key distinction is MCC code eligibility. Churches and recognized 501(c)(3) organizations can qualify for MCC 8661 (Religious Organizations) pricing, which carries lower interchange rates than standard retail MCC codes. Not all processors know how to file for this correctly — and some charge nonprofit rates without actually doing the work to get you the right MCC, which means you're leaving savings on the table.
Actual rate comparison
| Processor | Card-Present Rate | Card-Not-Present Rate | Nonprofit MCC Eligible | Monthly Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Square | 2.6% + $0.10 | 2.9% + $0.30 | No | $0 |
| Stripe | 2.9% + $0.30 | 3.4% + $0.30 | No | $0 |
| PayPal / Braintree | 2.99% + $0.49 | 3.49% + $0.49 | No | $0 |
| Tithe.ly / Pushpay | 2.4–2.9% | 2.9–3.5% | Sometimes | $129–$399/mo |
| Standard retail processor | 2.6–3.0% | 3.0–3.5% | Unlikely | $0–$25/mo |
| Least of These Payments | 2.20% + $0.08 | 2.50% + $0.20 | Yes — we file for you | $0 |
At $200,000 in annual giving volume (roughly 1,300 transactions at $150 average), the difference between 2.90% and 2.20% comes to about $3,600 per year in processing costs alone — before accounting for per-transaction fees. Add the monthly platform fees many church-specific processors charge, and the gap widens further.
What Your Finance Committee Should Actually Evaluate
Rate is important, but it's not the only factor. Here's what to actually look at when evaluating a merchant services relationship for your church:
Rate structure and transparency
Ask the processor to explain exactly how pricing works. "Interchange-plus" or "cost-plus" models are more transparent than tiered pricing — you can see what the card networks charge and what the processor adds. Get the actual rate in writing before you sign anything.
Also ask whether they file for the correct MCC code for religious organizations. If they can't explain this in plain language, they probably don't do it. Churches that aren't coded correctly pay standard retail rates and have no idea they're leaving money on the table.
Nonprofit / church rate qualification requirements
Some processors advertise church rates but require annual re-certification or have volume thresholds. Ask specifically what documentation is required, how often rates are reviewed, and what happens if your volume changes.
Contract terms and exit fees
This is where many churches get caught. Annual contracts with early termination fees are common in merchant services. If you need to switch — because rates change, service quality drops, or your church values evolve — an ET fee can run hundreds to over a thousand dollars. Ask specifically about termination fees before signing.
PCI compliance and security requirements
If your church uses an online giving form that collects card data on your own web server, you're in a higher PCI compliance tier (SAQ A-EP or higher) than if you use a hosted payment page. The difference in compliance burden is significant. Ask your processor what options they offer to reduce your compliance scope.
Statement clarity and reconciliation
Church finance teams need statements they can match against their general ledger. If your processor's monthly statement doesn't clearly show gross volume, fees, net deposit, and transaction counts by type, you'll spend time every month doing manual work that should be automated. Ask for a sample statement before committing.
See your church's actual savings
Enter your monthly giving volume and average gift size to see what processing costs look like with us vs. Square, Stripe, and PayPal — plus the projected annual donation to your charity partners.
Open the Church Savings Calculator →The ChMS Compatibility Question
If your church uses Planning Center Giving, Pushpay, Tithe.ly, Subsplash, or Breeze ChMS, you may be wondering whether a new processor fits with your existing stack.
Here's the honest answer: most church-specific giving platforms own their own payment rails — they process donations inside their own system and don't let you swap in a different processor for that traffic. That's by design.
What a processor like us serves is the rest of your payment activity that doesn't flow through those platforms:
- In-person card transactions (Sunday giving terminals, coffee cart, bookstore, gift shop)
- Event registrations and ticket sales
- Camp and retreat registrations
- Custom giving pages on your church website (not inside the ChMS app)
- ACH bank transfers for high-volume givers who prefer not to use cards
- Multi-campus churches that want consolidated processor relationships
If your church runs a multi-channel giving program — and most growing churches do — you likely have significant card volume that never touches your ChMS. That's what a mission-aligned processor handles best.
For churches using Breeze ChMS specifically: Breeze runs on Stripe's payment rails. If your church wants to use a different processor for in-person events or custom giving pages, we can work alongside Breeze — you run your recurring giving through Breeze and direct event/campus giving through us.
The Mission Alignment Question
Finance committees often ask: "Is mission-aligned processing worth it if we could save more with a different processor?"
That depends on what your church values and how you measure impact. Here's a framework for thinking through it:
If your priority is lowest possible cost: A standard retail processor with a low advertised rate might save you more on fees than a mission-aligned processor. But "advertised rate" often isn't what you actually pay — and you should evaluate the full picture including per-transaction fees, monthly fees, and contract terms.
If your priority is fee alignment with your values: A processor that donates a portion of your fees to causes your congregation already supports changes the optics of every transaction. Instead of processing fees going to a payment company's investors, a portion flows to Compassion International, Convoy of Hope, and International Justice Mission. That reframes processing from a cost center to a giving channel.
These two priorities aren't mutually exclusive. You can find a processor with competitive rates AND mission alignment — the trick is making sure the rate claims are real and verifiable, not just marketing.
What We Actually Do with Your Processing Fees
50% of our net revenue — after operating costs — goes to three Charity Navigator 4-star organizations: Compassion International (serving 2.2M+ children in 25 countries, 81% program efficiency), Convoy of Hope (serving 10M+ people annually, 93% program efficiency), and International Justice Mission (rescuing 4,500+ survivors per year, fighting human trafficking). We publish our full financials at leastofthesepayments.com/impact. We're pre-revenue — no donations yet — but this is how we're building the model.
What Church Finance Committees Actually Need to Know
Running through the practical checklist of what matters when choosing a payment processor for your church:
What to Look For
FAQ: Christian Payment Processing for Churches
The Bottom Line
Christian payment processing for churches isn't a category that guarantees quality — it's a descriptor that should signal two things: nonprofit rate structures that genuinely reduce your costs, and a business model that extends your church's mission through where fees actually go.
Rate matters. So does transparency. So does mission alignment. You don't have to choose between them — but you do have to verify the claims before you sign.
See our full church processor page with calculator and ChMS compatibility guide, or read how we allocate 50% of net revenue to the charities your congregation may already support.
Processing fees that fund the mission, not investors.
2.20% nonprofit rate for churches, no monthly fees, no contracts. 50% of net profits to Compassion, Convoy of Hope, and IJM. Apply in minutes.
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