Pricing proof

A crypto payment fee model your finance team can explain in one line.

XPayr applies a flat 0.5% gateway fee to completed payment sessions. Network gas is separate and depends on the selected chain, wallet, and token flow.

0.5%flat gateway fee
No custodymerchant wallet control
Testnetbefore mainnet review
Webhooksoperational records
Direct answer

XPayr fee split means a completed crypto payment session records the invoice amount, the 0.5% gateway fee, the chain-level cost boundary, and the net merchant amount. For a $1,000 invoice, the XPayr gateway fee is $5 before network gas or external wallet costs.

01

Merchant creates a session with invoice amount, network, token, and customer reference.

02

Customer pays from a wallet on the selected network.

03

XPayr records status, transaction reference, gateway fee, and reconciliation fields.

04

Merchant reviews the invoice, fee, net amount, token, network, and webhook history.

Who pays gas?

Network gas is not included in the 0.5% gateway fee. It is charged by the selected blockchain and wallet path.

Operational limit

Fee records depend on completed payment sessions. Failed, expired, or abandoned sessions are not production revenue events.

FAQ

What problem does this XPayr flow solve?

XPayr fee split means a completed crypto payment session records the invoice amount, the 0.5% gateway fee, the chain-level cost boundary, and the net merchant amount. For a $1,000 invoice, the XPayr gateway fee is $5 before network gas or external wallet costs.

Who pays gas or network fees?

Network gas is not included in the 0.5% gateway fee. It is charged by the selected blockchain and wallet path.

What should merchants not assume?

Fee records depend on completed payment sessions. Failed, expired, or abandoned sessions are not production revenue events.

Need to prove the flow before production?

Use testnet checkout, API docs, webhook guides, and operational explainers before asking for mainnet activation.