Whether platforms want to improve the stickiness of their product or are interested in opening up a new revenue stream, offering charge cards can be a compelling part of their business. With a charge card program, account holders can spend ahead of available funds and then repay the platform after the funds have been spent.
While charge cards sound great on paper, building a program can be challenging. Platforms need to think about how to fund the cards, collect repayments, handle lending compliance, and more. Luckily, banking-as-a-service (BaaS) providers like Stripe are able to help.
At the highest level, BaaS providers extend the infrastructure and logistics of a charge card program to platforms like fintechs and software companies. Platforms then use the underlying BaaS infrastructure to offer charge cards to their customers. For example, Stripe Issuing has a charge card program that Ramp uses to offer charge cards to its business customers. Platforms often want to offer charge cards as part of their expense management solution, since charge cards enable their customers to spend on a line of credit.
This guide explains what charge cards are, why they’re useful, and what to consider when choosing a charge card program. This guide is meant for platforms in the United States, serving US-based customers, since the financial services and products covered work differently in Europe and Asia Pacific.
The below is for general information and education purposes and is based on Stripe’s experience and market observations. This guide does not constitute legal advice, and you should check with your counsel regarding your own unique circumstances before offering charge cards to your customers.
What is a charge card?
Charge cards are conceptually similar to a credit card—they allow account owners to spend ahead of available funds and then repay a platform after the funds have been spent. In other words, both cards enable the account owners to spend on a line of credit.
However, there are two key differences between a charge card and a credit card. With a charge card: 1) cardholders can’t roll over a balance at the end of a payment term, and 2) cardholders can’t accumulate interest on unpaid balances. Charge cards must be paid in full at the end of a payment term. If a cardholder doesn’t pay the full balance when due, they may incur a late payment fee or another form of penalty.
Charge cards are also different from prepaid or debit cards. Prepaid and debit cards are always attached to an account that holds funds. With a prepaid or debit card, the account owner can only spend up to the amount of funds stored in the account associated with the card. Because of this, account owners aren’t able to accrue expenses and pay them back later. There must be enough stored funds readily available on the card for a successful transaction.
Most platforms use BaaS infrastructure to offer either charge cards or prepaid/debit cards.
信用卡
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签账卡
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预付卡或借记卡
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运作机制
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持卡人可基于信用额度透支消费。 | 持卡人可基于信用额度透支消费。 | 持卡人仅可使用账户可用余额。 |
还款机制
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交易后弹性还款;还款可滚入下一还款周期并计息。 | 交易后即时还款;还款不可滚入下一还款周期。 | 不适用——不涉及还款,因为持卡人无法超额消费。 |
How a charge card program works
Before diving into the details of offering charge cards, it’s helpful to have a high-level understanding of how a BaaS charge card program works and which entities are involved.

- Cardholder: The person at the business who uses the card to make purchases on behalf of the business. There may be one or many cardholders for each business. For example, if you work with sole proprietors who run their businesses independently, there’s likely only one cardholder for each business—the business owner. If you work with small businesses with multiple employees, they may have multiple cardholders who need a card for business purchases.
- Business: The platform’s customer and the card account owner. The business uses the platform’s software, and the platform offers the business access to cards as part of its product. Businesses can spend up to a certain credit limit, which is determined by the underwriting criteria.1
- Platform: The company that wants to offer its businesses access to cards. The platform could be a fintech company, a software platform (e.g., a vertical SaaS company) , or another type of company. The platform works with the BaaS provider to create a card offering for its business customers.
- BaaS provider: A nonbank (e.g., Stripe) that works with the partner bank(s) to build card programs that platforms use. The BaaS provider authorizes or declines transactions on behalf of the partner bank, maintains the system of record for cardholder data, and communicates settlements with the networks. Its compliance teams work with platforms to implement the partner bank’s compliance requirements and regularly monitor platforms for ongoing compliance.
- Partner bank: A federal- or state-chartered bank. One BaaS provider may work with several partner banks for its programs, and depending on how a BaaS charge card program is structured, the partner bank provides one or both of these services:
- Issuing payment cards (such as credit, debit, or prepaid cards) as a member of the card networks
- Originating credit for the business account owner and defining the compliance requirements that are implemented and monitored by BaaS providers
- Issuing payment cards (such as credit, debit, or prepaid cards) as a member of the card networks
Note, some platforms may choose to work directly with a partner bank and bypass a BaaS provider. See Best practices for lending programs for more information.
Benefits of offering charge cards
In general, there are several benefits to offering cards to your customers, whether they’re prepaid or extending credit:
- Earn interchange revenue: Every time a cardholder makes a purchase with a card issued through your card offering, you can earn money by keeping a portion of interchange, a cost that accompanies every card transaction. Platforms can choose to share a portion of their earned interchange revenue with their customers in the form of points, “cash back,” or other rewards.
- Access transaction insights: Platforms have access to spend data, which gives them proprietary information such as recurring-expense deadlines and growth trends. Spend management platforms, such as Ramp, use card transaction data to give their customers insights into their own spending trends and show them opportunities to cut costs.
- Create a new product offering: If cards aren’t part of your core product, you can offer them as a way to enhance your product suite. For example, a software platform that offers appointment software and payment processing for salons and barbershops might add charge cards as a way for businesses to manage their expenses. Learn more.
When you offer charge cards specifically, there are additional benefits:
- Extend access to working capital: Getting a charge card or a credit card can sometimes be onerous and can involve capital, cosigners, or robust financial statements. In fact, many startup or small business owners have to personally guarantee initial company spend. In a Stripe survey of startup owners, 22% said they would “prefer to use a business credit card” instead of a personal card.2 Platforms can fill this gap by providing working capital directly to businesses.
- Build a tailored lending offer: Platforms have a complete understanding of a business’s financial history based on the payments they process, and they inherently understand the business trends and typical capital needs for the specific industry they serve, whether that’s preseed startups or local beauty institutions. When platforms pair these insights with the infrastructure of a BaaS provider and its partner bank, they can give their users a tailored financial experience.
Build your charge card offering
Before offering charge cards, there are two key decisions you will need to make, which can impact your speed to market and user experience: how to set up lending and how to collect repayment.
Best practices for lending programs
Regulatory requirements can be difficult to comply with, and this is especially true for charge cards, where there is a lending component.
It’s important to set up any charge-card offering to extend credit in accordance with applicable laws and regulations. Compliance is essential to building a fintech platform: fail to get it right, and—at best—you could be faced with large fines that could hurt your company. At worst, your company could be shut down.
Typically, platforms set up lending in one of the following ways, but make sure to consult with your lawyer for your use case.
- Obtain lending licenses: Financial services licenses, such as lending licenses, are permits to perform certain limited activities normally reserved for institutions with a bank charter, and a platform could offer credit directly by obtaining lending licenses in states that require them.3 Obtaining these licenses is generally a resource-intensive effort in terms of time and money. The platform is subject to federal lending regulations, as well as oversight by state regulators.
- Working directly with a bank: With this option, the platform partners directly with a bank to fund loans, allowing the bank to become the lender of record and integrating directly with the bank’s APIs. The platform then distributes cards via the bank or a separate partner, such as a BaaS provider. (Banks don’t technically hold lending licenses, since that’s something suited for nonbanks. Instead, their charters enable them to extend loans.)
- Working with a BaaS provider: The platform works with a BaaS provider that provides easy-to-use APIs for integration and program manages legal and compliance oversight on behalf of its partner bank(s). The partner bank is the lender of record, and the platform can become the “creditor” by purchasing what’s called “receivables.” Think of receivables like debt—the platform purchases debt from the bank via the BaaS provider, and the platform then has that debt on its balance sheet. The platform will “hold” that debt for its customers (the business account owners) until the debt is due. The account owners will then pay the platform, offsetting the debt.
It’s important to note that in all options, the platform carries some oversight from the bank sponsor, although the level of oversight may vary depending on the model.
获取放贷牌照
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银行直连模式
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BaaS 提供商合作模式
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平台主体责任
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平台需取得美国各州放贷业务全境牌照。完成贷款发放后需将资金转入预付卡或借记卡。还需联合银行或 BaaS 提供商完成发卡。
平台虽可借此扩展信贷服务,但技术上不构成签账卡产品(因未附加信用额度)。
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平台需与银行协商法律协议,明确赔偿条款、商务条款及数据所有权与隐私条款等问题。还需完成与银行 API 的直接集成。
平台还需配置至少两个岗位(合规经理与项目经理),专职负责银企关系维护及银行合规要求落实。要求包括:实施合规政策和程序、员工培训、持续风控、风险评估、业务测试及平台金融产品定期报备。
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具体职责依 BaaS 服务商协议而定。
例如 Stripe 签账卡方案中,平台负责企业授信标准实施及额度设定,但无需建立银行担保关系(Stripe 已完成基础设施部署)。平台需与 Stripe 协同完成合作银行的持续合规要求,包括测试、培训及报备。
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优势
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平台可全面掌控服务方案,因其信贷发放不依赖银行端发起。
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因平台与银行直连,无需自行取得放贷资质。通常对产品设计有更高自主权,可直接与银行共建授信审批流程。
头部平台通过直连银行可获得更高比例的交换费收入分成。
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由于平台直连 BaaS 合作银行,既无需申请放贷牌照也不必自主寻找合作银行。借助 BaaS 提供商,可快速搭建并上线含信用支付功能的消费卡。
BaaS 提供商同步输出风控政策、测试资源与合规支持,并配备易用 API 及产品解决方案,覆盖信贷管理、分类账务、监管合规、KYC(客户身份验证)及企业持续还款追踪。
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考量因素
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放贷牌照申请流程繁复且各州放贷法规不一。通常需数年时间完成全美必要州份的牌照覆盖。
准入后平台需接受持续监管审查,各州合规要求存在差异。平台还需接受发卡行或 BaaS 提供商的附加合规监督。
预付卡或借记卡可能导致平台交换费收入降低。
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直连银行模式将产生高集成与管理成本。部署周期长达 12 个月(视平台规模而定)。
平台还需配置专职团队维护银企关系并满足持续合规要求。
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平台签账卡的信贷政策及授信流程需经 BaaS 提供商与合作银行审批监督。平台负责信贷政策执行,合作银行保留政策所有权及监督权(通常通过 BaaS 实现)。
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最佳适用对象
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已取得放贷牌照的平台。 | 以借贷为核心产品且计划组建大型合规团队与 BaaS 基础设施的平台。 | 需快速上市并低成本扩展服务矩阵的平台,或希望将借贷功能整合入全产品生态的平台。 |
What about merchant cash advances? Generally speaking, merchant cash advances (MCAs) aren’t loans. Instead, they’re an alternative to traditional loans, where a platform (or a “factoring company”) can offer a business access to its future revenue by purchasing receivables from its potential future revenue in exchange for a discount. The end result is that the business has access to (discounted) cash now and must pay the platform back as it receives revenue over time. MCAs generally carry more financial risk to the platform than loans. They’re normally repaid by giving the platform a percentage of sales that are withdrawn directly from a business’s revenue; however, if the business fails to generate revenue, the platform loses the profit altogether. Because of this, MCAs are also subject to different regulations than traditional lending, generally on a state-by-state basis. MCAs could also prove risky from a compliance standpoint since regulators are catching on to the fact that some companies use MCAs to circumvent lending laws. Consult your lawyer to learn more.
Setting up repayment
After funds are borrowed via a charge card, businesses need to repay their funds periodically—typically, every 15 or 30 days. In the context of charge cards, repayments normally include both the credited amount and fees—and the sum total of both are due at the end of every payment cycle. Repayment procedures should also specify what the borrower should do if they are unable to make a scheduled payment, including any special accommodations made for hardships.
You can set up repayments from cardholders for charge cards in several ways, which require you to decide how often to collect repayment and the method you’ll use to collect repayment.
How often you want to collect repayment from users is dependent on your working capital, the average amount your users are spending, and the working capital of your users. These settings should be available through your BaaS provider’s APIs. For example, Stripe’s APIs allow you to set repayment to happen weekly, monthly, on a particular day each month (e.g., the 15th of every month), or even every recurring 60 days.
When choosing the repayment method, make sure it’s easy for your cardholders to send you the repayment. Your BaaS provider should be able to provide you with guidance and mechanisms to easily collect repayment that’s consistent with best practices under applicable laws. For example, Stripe has a suite of payment products, like Invoicing and Checkout, that make it easy to collect repayment while minimizing a platform’s overall integration work.
How Stripe helps
Setting up a charge card offering on your own is complicated and is time and resource intensive. It may involve finding a bank partner, getting multiple financial services licenses, hiring legal experts, issuing cards, and deploying significant engineering resources. In addition, the underwriting costs and economic risks of businesses who may not be able to repay on time can be high.
Fortunately, Stripe can help. Stripe Issuing already takes on many of the components of offering cards (bank partnerships, funds flows, regulatory and compliance navigation, network connection, card printing and distribution, and integration APIs), but we also have features specifically for platforms wanting to offer charge cards:
- A compliance-first charge card program
- Capital-efficient funding options
- Integrated repayment options
Stripe Issuing’s charge card program
Our charge card program consists of two key parts—our receivables purchase program and our APIs.
Receivables purchase program
Our receivables purchase program (RPP) is our legal, compliance, and lending solution that enables platforms to offer businesses access to credit via our bank partners. Our partner banks are the lenders of record, and platforms can purchase receivables from the bank via Stripe. Our RPP enables platforms to offer businesses access to credit, without having to acquire lending licenses or navigate state-specific licensing requirements by themselves.

Platforms can also lean on Stripe’s compliance resources, such as our compliance policies, to set up and maintain a compliance-focused charge card offering. Our team works hand in hand with platforms to design a charge card offering that adheres to regulatory and partner bank requirements. Stripe’s compliance team has a kickoff with each platform, followed by a series of guided checklists and discussions to confirm the platform’s offering has all of the right processes, disclosures, reporting, and controls in place for final bank review and approval. We also conduct periodic reporting and testing activities on behalf of the partner bank in order to help manage the platform’s risk on an ongoing basis and to meet the ongoing monitoring expectations of our partner banks.
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No additional lending license or bank partnerships needed
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Offer a lending program across all 50 states
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Access to robust compliance resources
Our APIs
Our credit APIs can set credit limits and billing terms for each user and supports flexible repayment options such as weekly, monthly, etc. Platforms can make a single API call to retrieve the amount a business owes at any point in time, instead of manually calculating how much credit has been spent and accounting for refunds and disputes. They also help to manage each account’s credit obligation, which is automatically updated as the user spends, receives a refund, or wins a dispute. Platforms can use this API to create and manage a ledger that tracks how much credit has been extended to, spent by, and repaid by businesses.
Capital-efficient funding options
There are two ways a platform can fund its charge card offering with Stripe—prefunding and postfunding.
With prefunding, funds are readily available in a platform’s account to cover a cardholder’s future transaction. However, with postfunding, the platform funds its account only after a cardholder’s transaction is captured.

Generally, a postfunding model is more capital efficient than prefunding, since the platform doesn’t have to hold funds in an account with Stripe, providing them with more working capital. Most platforms see a >20% improvement in working capital by postfunding cards.
预融资模式
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后融资模式
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优势
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此通常为资金部署最简单、最快的模式,而且 Stripe 不设预融资最低准备金门槛。此为 Stripe 最主流的资金方案,建议新项目优先采用。 |
平台无需预存资金,因此无需预测支出,避免余额不足造成交易被拒。
而且平台资金效率更高,因为后融资模式所需准备金远低于预融资缓冲要求。
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考量因素
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预融资需精准资金预测,确保平台的账户余额覆盖持卡人消费。这意味着需考量业务突发增长或消费波动风险。最佳实践要求账户资金超额预留以防交易被拒。 | 后融资模式部署周期长且产生附加成本。类似其他资金流转投资协议,平台通常需缴纳现金准备金。 |
Integrated repayment options
Platforms can use our payments products to minimize their overall integration work, while also making it easy to collect repayment.
Two no-code, prebuilt payments products Stripe offers today are Checkout and Invoicing:
- Stripe Checkout is a prebuilt hosted payment page that supports one-time or recurring payments through a variety of payment methods, including bank accounts. Checkout is optimized for conversion and makes it easy for businesses to reuse payment information. Businesses come to a platform’s checkout page to make a payment.
- Stripe Invoicing can send invoices to businesses in minutes, without any code. It also has advanced features to automate accounts receivable, collect payments, and reconcile transactions. Invoicing is also optimized for conversion, with 87% of invoices paid within 24 hours.
Platforms can also choose to collect repayment outside of Stripe products.
Access to the full Stripe platform
In addition to Stripe Issuing and our charge card program, Stripe has an entire ecosystem of financial infrastructure products that can be combined in different ways:
- Stripe Treasury provides a flexible BaaS API to build full-featured financial products for your customers, whether it’s a store-and-spend account or spend-management offering. With Treasury, you have the core building blocks to create financial accounts, store funds, move money between parties, and attach cards for spending.
- Stripe Capital provides your platform on Stripe Connect with an end-to-end lending API that enables you to offer access to fast and flexible financing to help your customers grow their businesses. With Capital, your customers don’t have a lengthy application process, and repayment is automatic.
- Stripe Connect allows you to embed multiparty payments and offer a variety of financial services, such as collecting payments from your customers and paying out third parties. Platforms earn revenue by collecting fees for services provided.
- Stripe Financial Connections lets your users securely connect their existing financial accounts and share their financial data with your platform.
- Stripe Identity lets you programmatically confirm the identity of global users to comply with KYC regulations.
Get in touch with our team to learn more about how your platform can use Stripe to set up a charge card offering for your customers.
Notes
- The credit policy and underwriting for a platform’s charge card offering is subject to the BaaS provider and partner bank’s approval and oversight. The platform works with its BaaS provider and partner bank to design a credit policy that aligns to its own risk appetite.
- Stripe Card survey conducted among 770+ small to medium-sized businesses in the US about commercial banking experiences.
- In many US states, lending within certain parameters (such as having no or low finance charges or only extending credit to commercial entities) can be pursued without obtaining licenses. However, many big markets, such as California and Nevada, likely do not fall within this category since they have stricter lending license requirements. Consult your lawyer to learn more.