Forum Moderators: buckworks
Now I'm back in a situation again where I need to offer a recurring payment option. Doing this manually isn't practical. Judging from the fact that 2CO is still having serious problems they're no longer an option for me.
So, I signed up for PayPal (better rates than my brick and mortar merchant account) and then discovered that customers would have to be PP members to use the PP subscription service (recurring payments). Still a nice *option* to offer but that membership fact eliminated PP as being my sole cc processor.
So, it looks like I'm stuck trying to figure out how to put together all of the pieces of this online authorization stuff. I don't mind spending a few hundred dollars getting this up and running but I don't want to be throwing money away either. So...
a. What am I looking for? I can install a simple shopping cart - been there / done that - but at this point don't have a clue as to how to integrate cc processing. Can most carts handle recurring payments or have I just eliminated most carts? Or, are recurring payments not a cart issue? Am I going to need some heavy programming skills to integrate these things?
b. And, what "things" do I really need beyond the cart? Do I have to purchase separately a "gateway" and be paying someone for that each month plus another company to do the processing?
Obviously, any guidance greatly appreciated. I don't want to spend weeks and have lots of stress putting something together just because I'm somewhat challenged in this area.
Thanks.
You could also try Protx, as they link to your current Merchant account, and just act as a Gateway. The money is transferred stright to your account (i think), where as with Worldpay they pay your remittance weekly.
Fee wise Worldpay is £305 including VAT initially, and then on the anviserviry of that you pay £160 every year.
I expect most carts can handle recurring payments, although you may need to send some additional variables to the C/C processing server.
Just my 2 cents though (although being british it's pennies, (hopefully never euros though))