Beginner10–15 minLesson 9

Processors & Crypto Cards — How Payments Work in the Wild

See how merchant invoices, confirmations, and refunds actually work. Learn the pros/cons of custodial processors and crypto cards. Finish with your own 'How I will pay invoices' flowchart.

Lesson Progress0%
What you'll learn
  • Understand custodial vs self-hosted payment processors and the typical invoice flow.
  • Know how amount locks, network selection, and confirmations affect success and timing.
  • Recognize how processors handle under/over/late payments.
  • Evaluate crypto cards: convenience, fees, KYC, regional availability, custodial risk.
  • Practice a mock payment and capture the confirmation flow for your notes.
  • Produce a printable flowchart for how you'll pay invoices safely.

9.1 Processors 101: custodial vs self-hosted

A processor generates a time-limited invoice and detects your payment on-chain (or Lightning). Some hold your funds (custodial), others let merchants self-host (e.g., BTCPay-like).

Custodial Processors

Quick setup, multiple networks, compliant features (KYC/AML), but add counterparty risk and fees/spreads.

Self-hosted Processors

More control, lower fees, higher operational complexity; merchant bears infrastructure and compliance responsibilities.

Invoice Anatomy

Amount in fiat, exchange rate lock for X minutes, QR code (address+amount), supported networks, countdown timer.

Confirmations

Varies by network/amount/risk policy (e.g., 0–1 for Lightning, 1–3 for on-chain small payments). Processor shows: Pending → Confirmed → Credited.

Volatility Handling

Rate is locked for the invoice window; after expiry, a new rate applies.

Network Requirements

Match network exactly; some chains require tags/memos (e.g., destination tag/memo on certain networks); processors show these fields explicitly.

Right approach
  • Pay from a wallet you control, on the exact network shown
  • Send within the countdown window; wait for required confirmations
  • If unsure, send a small test first and then the remaining amount
Risky behavior
  • Paying after expiry or on the wrong network
  • Sending from exchanges with slow withdrawals when timer is short
  • Ignoring required memo/tag fields on networks that use them

9.2 Under/over/late payments

Underpayment

Sent less than required

Outcome: Processor may request a top-up within the window or mark invoice as underpaid and offer a refund path (minus fees).

Overpayment

Sent more than required

Outcome: Excess may be refunded to your sending address per policy. Expect delays and identity checks for larger amounts.

Late Payment

After timer expired

Outcome: Payment detected but rate lock expired → refund or manual review.

Wrong Network/Token

Sent on unsupported chain

Outcome: Often unrecoverable. Some processors can't see funds on unsupported chains. Always double-check chain and token standard.

9.3 Crypto cards (virtual and physical): convenience vs control

Crypto cards feel like normal cards. They are convenient but typically custodial and require KYC.

Funding

Top-up crypto → provider converts to fiat on swipe; or auto-sell at POS.

Fees

Spread on conversion, card/FX/ATM fees, possible monthly/issuance fees.

Custodial Risk

Provider can freeze funds or block transactions due to policy/region compliance.

Availability

KYC, residency, and regional rules apply; virtual cards may work for online subscriptions.

Privacy

Transactions are card-network visible; not private crypto payments.

Card Fee Calculator

Spread Fee

$2.50

Total Fee

$4.00

Effective Rate

4.00%

Safer Use Tips
  • Keep small balances on card accounts; use 2FA; lock card in app when idle.
  • Separate funding wallet from your main holdings.
  • Read fee schedules; beware 'cashback' bait that hides spreads.
Right approach
  • Keep small balances; top-up as needed
  • Use 2FA and lock card when not in use
  • Separate funding wallet from main holdings
  • Read and compare fee schedules
Risky behavior
  • Storing large amounts on card accounts
  • Ignoring conversion spreads and hidden fees
  • Using card for large purchases without fee awareness
  • Trusting 'cashback' promises without reading terms

9.4 Practice: mock invoice walkthrough

Walk through a simulated invoice, choose a network, and record the confirmation flow (screenshots or printable steps).

Mock Invoice

Amount

$49.00 USD

Lock Time

15 minutes

9.5 Deliverable: 'How I will pay invoices' flowchart

Define your default decision path for paying crypto invoices and when you'll use a card instead. No secrets are collected; generated locally.

Your Payment Flowchart

Decision Flow Nodes

1
2DECISION
3DECISION
4
5
6

Exceptions: Under/over/late → follow processor's refund/top-up instructions; document tx hash and support ticket ID.

=== MY INVOICE PAYMENT FLOWCHART === Generated: 20/05/2026 Preferred Network: (not set) Minimum Timer: (not set) minutes Backup Method: (not set) Refund Contact Note: (not set) === DECISION FLOW === 1. Start 2. [DECISION] Invoice OK? ├─ [If Yes →] Proceed └─ [If No →] Find alternative 3. [DECISION] Timer OK? (threshold: 10) ├─ [If Yes →] Pay now └─ [If No →] Use faster method 4. Send full amount 5. Wait confirmations 6. Done === EXCEPTIONS === Under/over/late payments: → Follow processor's refund/top-up instructions → Document tx hash and support ticket ID --- Educational document only. Do not enter seeds, private keys, or card numbers.

This is for your operational workflow. Do not enter seeds, private keys, or full card numbers.

Resources (non-affiliated; verify domains yourself)
  • Processor documentation (invoice, confirmations, refunds): check your provider's official help center.
  • Self-hosted payments: BTCPay-style docs and guides.
  • Card programs: official fee schedules and region availability pages.

Compliance Notice

Educational content only — not financial, legal, or tax advice. Policies, fees, and availability change. Always verify the invoice network and timer; use small test amounts if possible. Crypto cards are custodial: your access can be restricted by provider policy.

9.6 Quick Quiz

Mini-Quiz

Test your understanding with 6 questions. Pass with 4/6 correct.