←back to thread

721 points hhs | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.21s | source
Show context
pc ◴[] No.22890523[source]
Stripe cofounder here. This isn't really new -- it's an extension of our last round (https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/19/fintech-start-up-stripe-notc...).

That said, we've seen a big spike in signups over the past few weeks. If any HN readers have integrated recently and have feedback, we're always eager to hear it. Feel free to email me at patrick@stripe.com and I'll route to the right team(s).

As always, thank you to the many HNers who are also active Stripe users!

replies(39): >>22890622 #>>22890634 #>>22890672 #>>22890684 #>>22890831 #>>22890979 #>>22891191 #>>22891279 #>>22891405 #>>22891409 #>>22891593 #>>22891638 #>>22891711 #>>22891797 #>>22891995 #>>22892025 #>>22892038 #>>22892061 #>>22892643 #>>22892871 #>>22892981 #>>22892999 #>>22893425 #>>22893502 #>>22893523 #>>22893570 #>>22893665 #>>22893808 #>>22894106 #>>22894551 #>>22894687 #>>22895895 #>>22896013 #>>22896582 #>>22896793 #>>22897309 #>>22897898 #>>22898327 #>>22898711 #
plantain ◴[] No.22891191[source]
My top issues running my business on Stripe:

1) Many countries still only allow depositing a single currency (i.e. Aus/AUD), doubling the cost of transaction due to the currency conversion, even tripling when we have to convert it back to pay our bills. I always get told either "soon", or "not possible due to the law", despite competitors doing it.

2) If we were an EU company, we'd get charged 1.4%+25c on transactions in the EU, where most of our customers are. Instead, because we're selling from Australia, we get charged 2.9% for some arbitrary reason. This coupled with 1) puts our all-in transaction fees at 5%+ :(

3) I think billing the vendor for refund fees is a really retrograde step - it increases friction in the decision for us when a customer asks for a refund, and industry wide is going to cause less happy customers and less card users online. It's already hard enough convincing Dutch/German customers to use a credit card online.

If any non-EU companies know a cheaper way to process transactions in the EU, I'm all ears...

replies(18): >>22891306 #>>22891361 #>>22891379 #>>22891509 #>>22891874 #>>22891994 #>>22892884 #>>22893178 #>>22893223 #>>22893471 #>>22893669 #>>22893794 #>>22893916 #>>22895751 #>>22897859 #>>22897918 #>>22899678 #>>22942845 #
pc ◴[] No.22891306[source]
Great feedback... thank you. In case it's useful, some context on them:

On (1), we started an FX team this year. (There are a lot of legal complexities here around how the funds move, who has title to what at which moment, and so on.) But we're investing significantly in improving it and it should get better soon. On (2), the core issue is card network pricing rules -- by design, they discriminate on the basis of where the business is located. We happily extend EU fees to all EU legal entities, however, and would be happy to work with you to set that up. On (3), refunds aren't free for Stripe, and we were previously in a position where businesses with a lot of refunds were being subsidized by those who didn't. We want to give this margin away more sensibly.

Still, all the issues you bring up are real and I'd like us to find better solutions.

replies(6): >>22891452 #>>22891903 #>>22892464 #>>22893333 #>>22893629 #>>22898632 #
1. sealthedeal ◴[] No.22893629[source]
You should consider chatting with us @routefusion :)

developer.routefusion.co

we will solve all of those nasty FX problems your customers are having. Already doing it for a few other e-comm platforms that link into Stripe.