eCheck Payment Processing

The Easiest Way to Accept and Process eCheck Payments

As easy as credit cards for your customers, at a fraction of the cost to you. Anyone with a bank account can pay you with eChecks, for a micro fixed-fee that could save you thousands on transaction costs. Let us show you how.

eCheck Payment Processing

eCheck for Business-to-Business Payments

Paper checks are dying off, but high transaction fees make credit card payments a terrible alternative. eChecks are a more affordable alternative to credit cards, faster than paper checks, and allow you to automate your billing process with recurring charges.

Not all eCheck offerings are the same: only Paystand gives you everything you need to accept eChecks alongside credit cards in a single checkout with instant funds verification.

Drop-in eCheck Gateway, No Coding Required

With Paystand's drop-in payment gateway, BIIA Insurance was able to start accepting eChecks on their website within a week. Today, they are saving thousands of dollars per month on unnecessary transaction fees, and their customers appreciate the convenience of paying online.

Read their story.

Drop-in eCheck Gateway, No Coding Required

Learn more about eChecks

What you don't know about payment methods can end up costing you. Learn the ins and outs of ACH and eCheck transactions, how to accept them online, and how to steer your customers to more affordable online payments.

Learn more about eChecks
Frequently Asked Questions about eCheck

Frequently Asked Questions about eCheck

What’s the difference between eCheck and ACH?

The eCheck system is the culmination of over twenty years of collaboration between the U.S. government, banks, tech companies and other stakeholders to enable check payments to function securely on the Internet. It is designed for businesses of all sizes, including individuals, to perform direct bank debits digitally within the well-established checking infrastructure. ACH, or Automated Clearinghouse, is a separate system that was developed in the 1970s to facilitate high-volume money transfers between trusted parties. It is most commonly used for applications like direct deposit payroll and automated loan payments. Because ACH enables both debits and credits, it requires an elaborate legal framework and high degree of trust between parties, which has limited its usefulness as an online payment method. eCheck enables secure, one-off or recurring direct bank payments that don’t necessitate a blanket authorization between trusted parties to function. Because eCheck works between banks without unnecessary middlemen, they also carry lower fees than ACH.The eCheck system was architected to exceed even the high standards for online credit card processing. It leverages state-of-the-art cryptography and digital signatures to ensure the validity of each transaction. The eCheck framework is further protected by the long-established legal structure around checks. Because eCheck payments are initiated by the customer, they show a clear authorization and intent to pay instantly, therefore dramatically reducing the refund and chargeback requests commonly associated with credit card charges.