Introduction: Why High-Risk Merchant Accounts Get Rejected
Getting a high-risk merchant account approved is one of the biggest challenges for businesses in industries like iGaming, adult, crypto, nutraceuticals, travel, or subscription services.
Rejections usually fall into two categories:
- You are outside the provider’s risk policy or appetite
- You are perceived as too risky within their acceptable scope
This distinction is critical:
- If you're outside risk appetite, no negotiation will fix it. Don't waste time and go to a different provider
- If you're too risky but within scope, the deal can often be structured and approved
And that’s exactly where negotiation becomes powerful.
Why You Should Listen to This
For 7 years, I worked on the acquiring bank side as a sales professional, negotiating directly with online businesses while collaborating with risk teams to structure deals and get them approved.
I’ve reviewed, structured, and approved deals representing billions in processing volume.
The difference between approval and rejection almost always came down to one thing:
How well the risk was structured vs how attractive the reward was
What Makes a Merchant “High Risk”?
Before talking about approval, you need to understand why payment providers classify you as high risk in the first place.
1. MCC (Merchant Category Code) Classification
Every merchant is assigned an MCC (Merchant Category Code), a 4-digit code that defines your business activity.
Some MCCs are inherently considered high risk by banks and card networks.
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Why MCC matters:
- It directly influences underwriting decisions
- Some industries have historically higher chargebacks
- Certain categories face stricter controls or monitoring
2. Your Business Model (Beyond MCC)
Even within the same MCC, risk levels vary significantly.
Payment providers also evaluate:
- Chargeback ratios
- Delivery delays (e.g. travel, pre-orders)
- Subscription / recurring billing
- Cross-border activity
Acquirers don’t just evaluate your model, they evaluate how you operate it.
Strong signals include:
- Third-party compliance checks
- KYC / KYB processes
- Testing your own customer journey
- Monitoring refund and complaint flows
This tells risk teams: “This merchant is in control.”
3. Approval is not the end, but the start
Risk management doesn’t stop after onboarding.
Payment providers continuously monitor:
- Chargeback ratios
- Fraud levels
- Processing behavior
Which means:
- Good performance = better terms over time
- Poor performance = restrictions or termination
The Core Principle: Risk vs Reward
Every approval decision comes down to a simple equation:
Is the risk controlled, and is the reward worth it?
Payment providers evaluate:
- Potential chargebacks
- Exposure to fraud
- Possible card scheme fines
- Regulatory risks
Your job is not to eliminate risk, but to:
- Reduce the downside
- Increase the upside
When both are aligned, deals get approved.
Acquirers prefer merchants that are:
- Easy to monitor
- Predictable
- Operationally clean
Position Yourself as “Low Maintenance” will improve the odds of getting your high risk merchant account approved.
How to Get a High-Risk Merchant Account Approved
To get approved, you need to think like a risk team.
These are the exact strategies used on the acquiring side to make deals acceptable.
1. Use Upfront Collateral to Reduce Immediate Risk
A security deposit that protects the provider from day one.
Why it works:
- Covers immediate exposure
- Signals strong commitment
- Reduces perceived risk instantly
2. Implement a Rolling Reserve
A percentage (typically 5–10%) of transactions held over time (180 days is market standard).
Why it works:
- Covers delayed chargebacks
- Protects future exposure
- Aligns incentives
3. Adjust Payment Terms
Move from:
- Daily payouts → Weekly payouts
- Instant settlement → Delayed settlement
Why it works:
- Provides time to detect fraud
- Reduces exposure window
4. Accept Volume Caps
Limit processing volume initially.
Why it works:
- Caps maximum loss
- Enables controlled scaling
This is often the easiest way to turn a rejection into a test approval.
5. Offer Higher Fees
Higher risk requires higher reward.
Why it works:
- Improves profitability
- Offsets potential losses
Many deals fail because merchants resist this lever.
6. Net Settlement (Advanced Risk Control Used by Acquirers)
With net settlement, the acquirer transfers funds to the merchant after deducting fees, chargebacks, and other costs upfront.
No invoicing. No delays in recovering funds.
Why it works:
- Eliminates collection risk for the acquirer
- Reduces operational complexity
- Protects margins in real time
Why risk teams like it:
- Immediate cost coverage
- No dependency on merchant repayment
- Cleaner financial control
Insider insight: This is often used with more mature or scaled merchants where operational efficiency matters as much as risk.
7. Combine Strategies (This Is Where Deals Get Approved)
The strongest deals are structured, not simplified.
Examples:
- Rolling reserve + volume cap
- Collateral + delayed settlement
- Higher fees + weekly payouts
This is how you transform a risky deal into an acceptable one.
How to Negotiate with Payment Providers (Like an Insider)
From experience, here’s the truth:
Risk teams don’t respond to persuasion, they respond to structure.
Instead of:
“We need better terms”
Say:
“Here’s how we reduce your downside while making this profitable for you”
What works in negotiation:
- Acknowledge risks upfront
- Propose solutions proactively
- Accept trade-offs
- Focus on long-term relationship
Bonus: Reduce Risk Proactively
The best merchants don’t just accept controls, they bring solutions:
- Fraud prevention tools
- Chargeback monitoring (https://www.eflow.com/chargeback-prevention)
- Clear refund processes
- Strong customer support
This dramatically increases approval chances.
“Acquirers feel more comfortable when merchants use dispute and fraud management services”
Common Mistakes That Lead to Rejection
From the acquiring side, these are red flags:
- Fighting risk controls
- Ignoring chargeback exposure
- Accepting unusually high fees without negotiation
- Not understanding provider constraints
Conclusion: Structure the Deal, Don’t Fight the Risk
Getting a high-risk merchant account approved isn’t about avoiding risk.
It’s about structuring it.
If you:
- Understand risk appetite
- Mitigate exposure
- Align reward
You’ll consistently get approved, even when others don’t.



