XPayr helps Web3 and crypto-native services standardize checkout sessions, webhook status, supported networks and tokens, wallet settlement, and fee delegation rules for supported token flows. Unsupported gasless tokens fall back to normal wallet payment.
Crypto checkout for teams that already understand wallets but still need records.
Crypto-native teams often do not need basic crypto education. They need clean checkout state, API events, supported token routes, settlement controls, fee delegation policies, and transparent operational records.
Web3 and crypto-native services teams usually need more than a wallet address.
Checkout that can be tested
Start with payment links or an embedded widget, then move into API checkout when product or finance automation is ready.
Records for operations
Payment sessions, webhook events, transaction status, and dated exports help teams replace manual wallet reconciliation.
Non-custodial settlement
XPayr is designed around direct merchant wallet settlement and does not hold merchant funds or operate withdrawal balances.
Best-fit use cases for Web3 and crypto-native services
Merchant fit
- Web3 SaaS
- Token-gated communities
- Crypto tools
- On-chain services
- Wallet-native products
Search and buyer angles
- API events
- fee delegation
- gasless-ready supported tokens
- route registry
Evaluation path
Check supported networks and token-specific availability before production rollout.
XPayr compared with a manual wallet-only flow
| Need | Manual wallet address | XPayr |
|---|---|---|
| Payment confirmation | Manual chain checks or screenshots. | Payment session status, transaction logs, and webhooks. |
| Fee story | Often unclear across tools and manual processes. | Flat 0.5% XPayr gateway fee, before network gas or external route costs. |
| Supported routes | Depends on what the merchant manually monitors. | EVM routes, TRON USDT, Solana SOL/USDC/USDT, and published token availability. |
| Operational scaling | Difficult once invoices, users, or deposits grow. | Links, widgets, API/webhooks, recurring records, Payout Hub, and settlement policies. |
Questions teams ask before using XPayr
What is the fastest way to test XPayr for Web3 and crypto-native services?
Create a free merchant account, open testnet checkout, generate a payment link or API session, and confirm that the payment record, webhook status, and transaction details match your operational flow.
How much does XPayr charge?
XPayr charges a flat 0.5% gateway fee per successful transaction. Network gas, wallet fees, or external route costs are separate from the XPayr gateway fee.
Does XPayr hold merchant funds?
No. XPayr is designed as non-custodial payment infrastructure. Supported payments settle to the merchant wallet or follow merchant-controlled routing without XPayr holding merchant funds.
Which payment methods can this page evaluate?
Merchants can evaluate payment links, widgets, API checkout, supported EVM routes, TRON USDT, Solana SOL/USDC/USDT, settlement preferences, and fee delegation where token and route support allow it.
Prove the flow before you commit engineering time.
Create a free merchant account, run a testnet checkout, then decide whether links, widgets, API checkout, settlement routing, or payout preparation should be activated for your use case.