Crypto Payment Impact Calculator
Estimate how partial crypto adoption may affect payment costs, chargeback exposure, cross-border fees, FX costs, operational overhead, and incremental contribution profit. Every assumption is visible and can be edited.
What creates the modeled financial difference
Positive values show card costs avoided. Negative values show added crypto costs.
Monthly cost breakdown
Each cost is shown separately so you can compare the result with processor statements.
| Cost component | Current card model | Hybrid model | Difference |
|---|
How results change at different crypto adoption levels
The table keeps all cost assumptions unchanged and varies only the share of existing GMV moved to crypto.
| Crypto adoption | Modeled transaction share | Hybrid monthly payment cost | Monthly cost reduction | Annual cost reduction |
|---|

How the calculator measures payment cost savings and revenue impact
A useful comparison must include more than headline processing rates. The calculator separates costs based on payment value, transaction count, international payment volume, and disputed card payments. OxaPay’s crypto payment lifecycle explains where processing, settlement, reconciliation, and financial records sit in the wider business flow.
1. Current card-payment cost
The current card model includes percentage fees, fixed fees, cross-border surcharges, FX costs, modeled chargeback losses, and optional card operational overhead. Cross-border and FX costs apply only to the GMV shares entered in those fields. The Financial Stability Board identifies cost, speed, access, and transparency as recurring cross-border payment challenges.
2. Hybrid monthly payment cost after partial crypto adoption
The hybrid model removes the selected crypto share from card volume and transaction count. It then recalculates the remaining card costs. Crypto processing, fixed fees, merchant-paid network costs, conversion or off-ramp costs, and operational overhead are added separately. Review OxaPay’s crypto transaction fees guide before estimating network-related costs.
3. Chargeback exposure
Chargeback exposure is estimated from disputed transaction count, average disputed value, unrecovered revenue, processor fees, fulfillment loss, and handling cost. The crypto share is removed from card-network chargeback exposure, but refunds, support cases, and customer disputes may still occur.
4. Incremental revenue
Revenue moved from cards to crypto is not treated as growth. The optional revenue section is only for genuinely new sales enabled by crypto. The calculator applies gross margin, subtracts crypto payment costs, and adds the remaining contribution profit to the result.

When crypto payments may create a stronger financial impact
International payment volume
Businesses with significant cross-border and FX costs may avoid more cost layers when international customers pay with crypto.
Low average order value
Fixed card fees take a larger share of low-value orders. Model transaction share separately from GMV share when crypto orders have a different AOV.
Chargeback-heavy products
Digital goods, remote services, and other dispute-sensitive businesses may see a larger difference, but they still need clear refund and support policies.
New customer access
Crypto may create incremental revenue when customers cannot or will not use existing payment methods. Enter this benefit conservatively.
A negative result is still useful
A negative result means crypto processing, conversion, network, or operational costs are higher than the card costs avoided at that adoption level. It does not mean crypto cannot work for the business. It means the current setup does not yet create a direct financial advantage under the entered assumptions. Different crypto payment settlement models can produce materially different conversion, liquidity, and operational outcomes.

What the result includes and excludes
Included when entered
- Card percentage and fixed processing fees
- Cross-border and FX costs
- Chargeback loss, dispute fees, fulfillment, and handling
- Crypto processing and fixed fees
- Merchant-paid network and conversion costs
- Monthly operational overhead
- Incremental contribution profit from genuinely new revenue
Not included unless modeled separately
- Tax, legal, or jurisdiction-specific compliance treatment, including potentially relevant OECD crypto-asset reporting standards
- Volatility losses when settlement is not stable, or the accounting treatment of holdings under the IFRS cryptocurrency holdings agenda decision
- Liquidity, reserve, or working-capital value
- Integration labor and one-time development cost
- Customer acquisition value beyond entered incremental revenue
- Refund liabilities not included in operational inputs
- Contract-specific rates not entered by the user

How to build a reliable scenario
- Start with processor statements. Use actual percentage rates, fixed fees, international charges, and dispute records.
- Separate GMV share from transaction share. Crypto orders may have a different average order value from card orders.
- Allocate international volume carefully. Cross-border and FX savings apply only when crypto replaces transactions that currently create those costs.
- Use the public rate as a baseline. Replace it with the actual OxaPay rate agreed for the business when available.
- Estimate incremental revenue conservatively. Count only sales that would not have occurred through existing payment methods.
- Test several adoption levels. Use the sensitivity table to identify whether a pilot can reach break-even, then complete the crypto payment readiness framework before exposing the flow to a broader customer group.
Crypto payment cost and savings questions
Does crypto completely remove payment costs?
No. It may replace selected card-side costs, but crypto processing, conversion, withdrawal, network, support, accounting, and treasury costs may still apply.
Why are GMV share and transaction share separate?
Fixed fees depend on transaction count, while percentage fees depend on value. A 25% crypto share of GMV does not necessarily mean 25% of transactions.
Does the calculator assume a 0.4% OxaPay fee?
No. Merchant Invoice and Payment Link use a 1.5% public-rate preset. The tailored 0.4% scenario must be selected deliberately and remains subject to business terms.
Are crypto payments chargeback-free?
Crypto payments do not use traditional card-network chargeback rails. Merchants still need refund, fraud, customer-support, and dispute-resolution policies.
How should new revenue be entered?
Enter only additional revenue that would not have been processed through existing methods. Do not include revenue merely moved from cards to crypto.
Why can the calculator show negative savings?
Crypto fees, conversion costs, network expenses, or operational overhead may exceed the card costs displaced at a low adoption level. The sensitivity table shows where the scenario may reach break-even.
Financial terms used in this calculator
Payment and volume terms
- GMV: Gross Merchandise Value—the total value of payments processed during a period.
- AOV: Average Order Value—payment volume divided by transaction count.
- FX cost: The cost of converting one currency into another.
- Cross-border surcharge: An additional fee applied to some international card payments.
- Effective cost rate: Total modeled payment cost as a percentage of payment volume.
- Hybrid payment model: A scenario in which the business accepts both cards and crypto.
Risk and impact terms
- Chargeback exposure: The estimated financial cost created by disputed card payments.
- Operational overhead: Ongoing internal costs such as accounting, support, monitoring, treasury, and reconciliation.
- Incremental revenue: New sales that would not have occurred through existing payment methods.
- Incremental contribution profit: Profit from new revenue after applying gross margin and crypto payment costs.
- Break-even adoption: The crypto payment share at which estimated savings cover added crypto costs.
- Sensitivity analysis: A comparison showing how the result changes at different crypto adoption levels.
Use the scenario to plan a controlled crypto payment pilot
OxaPay provides payment links, merchant invoices, white-label infrastructure, static addresses, APIs, webhooks, and payment tracking. Use this calculator to build realistic assumptions, then compare them with actual pilot data.