Explanation of Shopify Payments
Last modified: June 17, 2026
| # | Name | Image | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
Verify COD Orders by auto call
|
|
| 2 |
|
LeadForm: COD ‑ Order Form
|
|
| 3 |
|
COD Order Confirmation
|
|
| 4 |
|
EasyOrder ‑ Order Form for COD
|
|
| 5 |
|
EasySell ‑ Easy Order Form
|
|
|
Show More
|
|||
-
Is Shopify Payments available worldwide?
No, Shopify Payments is currently available in select countries, mainly in North America, Europe, and some other regions. Check Shopify’s official website for the most up-to-date list of supported countries.
-
Can I accept international currencies with Shopify Payments?
Yes, you can accept payments in multiple international currencies using Shopify Payments. This simplifies the purchasing process for customers worldwide, as they can shop in their preferred currency.
-
Are there any payout delays with Shopify Payments?
Payouts from Shopify Payments typically take a few business days to reach your bank account, depending on your location and banking institutions. Some regions may experience longer delays.
-
Should I use Shopify Payments or Stripe?
For most Shopify stores in supported countries, Shopify Payments is the better choice. It has the same or lower transaction fees than Stripe in most regions, requires no separate gateway setup, and avoids Shopify’s third-party transaction fee (which adds 0.5-2% on top of Stripe’s own rates). Stripe is the right choice if you sell on multiple platforms beyond Shopify, if you are in a country where Shopify Payments is not available, or if you need Stripe’s developer APIs for custom checkout flows. For a pure Shopify store, Shopify Payments wins on simplicity and effective cost.
-
What are the requirements to use Shopify Payments?
You need three things: a Shopify plan (any plan except Starter on some regions), a business address in a supported country, and the ability to provide tax and banking details to Shopify. Shopify also requires you to comply with their list of prohibited and restricted businesses, which excludes adult content, gambling, and certain regulated products. If your products are in a restricted category, you will need a third-party gateway instead. The full requirements appear during Shopify Payments onboarding in your admin.
-
Does Shopify Payments charge a currency conversion fee?
Yes. When a customer pays in a currency different from your payout currency, Shopify Payments charges a currency conversion fee of around 1.5% in the US and 2% in most other regions on top of the regular transaction fee. This is competitive with what Stripe and PayPal charge for similar conversions, but it is worth factoring into pricing if you sell across borders frequently. Settling in the same currency you sell in (via multi-currency Shopify Markets) is the way to minimise this fee.
Getting More Out of Shopify Payments
Multi-Currency Support
Shopify Payments handles multi-currency transactions automatically. You can set your store to display prices in a customer’s local currency while receiving payouts in your home currency. Currency conversion fees apply (typically 1.5% in the US), so factor that into your pricing if you sell heavily to international customers.
Refunds and Chargebacks
Shopify Payments manages refunds and chargebacks directly in the same admin you use for orders and payouts. There is no separate dashboard to learn. Issuing a refund takes two clicks from the order page. Responding to a chargeback uses the built-in evidence submission form, which is faster than managing disputes through a third-party gateway portal.
Customising Payment Options
You can control which payment methods appear at checkout. If you want to hide certain wallets or only show specific card types, those settings live in Settings > Payments. You can also enable or disable Shop Pay, which lets returning customers check out with saved payment and shipping information without re-entering details.
Driving Growth with Shopify Payments
Shopify Balance
Shopify Balance is a business account that gives you faster access to your Shopify Payments earnings. Instead of waiting for a standard bank transfer, funds from sales flow into your Shopify Balance account and are available to spend immediately via a Shopify Balance card. This is useful for merchants who want to reinvest revenue into inventory or ads without waiting for a payout cycle.
Shop Pay Installments
Shop Pay Installments lets customers split purchases into four interest-free payments or longer-term monthly payments. This is available on eligible Shopify Payments stores in the US and can increase conversion rates on higher-priced items by making the purchase easier to budget for. You receive the full amount upfront; Shopify and its lending partner handle the installment collection from the customer.
Shopify Capital
Shopify Capital offers funding based on your store’s sales history through Shopify Payments. If eligible, Shopify will offer you a lump sum that you repay as a percentage of daily sales until the total is paid back. There are no fixed monthly payments and no interest in the traditional sense, which makes it a practical option for merchants who want to fund a large inventory purchase without taking on a bank loan.
Conclusion
Shopify Payments is the default choice for most Shopify merchants in supported countries, mainly because it removes the additional Shopify transaction fee and keeps everything inside one admin. For merchants outside the 40+ supported countries, or those in restricted business categories, third-party gateways like Stripe or PayPal are the practical alternatives. The fee difference between plans is real and worth calculating against your monthly volume before deciding which Shopify plan to use alongside Shopify Payments.