The pressure on traditional payment systems is increasing. Chargebacks could reach 337 million in 2026, with up to 80% of e-commerce fraud attributed to friendly fraud — legitimate purchases disputed after delivery.
For merchants, this means every card transaction carries built-in risk: revenue loss, operational overhead, and the ongoing threat of account termination by processors. This is one of the key reasons businesses start looking at crypto — and USDT in particular, where chargebacks don’t exist by design.
There’s a common story during merchant onboarding at Finassets low-fee crypto payment gateway. A card processor stops working. The business finds a crypto gateway and integrates it. A few months later, the finance team is manually reconciling transactions in a blockchain explorer, customers are writing in to ask what happened to their payment, and fees vary from one transaction to the next.
The problem isn’t crypto. The problem is that most merchants treat switching to USDT as changing a payment rail — rather than implementing payment infrastructure. Those are fundamentally different things.
The structural issue is the static wallet — the standard approach most providers still offer. One address, shared across transactions, with no order mapping and no visibility into partial payments. It doesn’t scale. Finance teams end up doing manual reconciliation work that shouldn’t exist.
USDT is a stablecoin pegged to the dollar. Unlike Bitcoin or Ethereum, its rate doesn’t move intraday. The amount a merchant receives equals the amount a customer sent — no volatility adjustment required, no chargeback mechanism by design. This is exactly what merchants are looking for when they move away from card payments: predictability and reduced risk.
But there’s one structural limitation that often gets missed: crypto checkout is not a fiat on-ramp. The customer must already hold USDT in their wallet. The checkout provides a structured payment page — it doesn’t convert fiat to crypto or create a wallet for the user. This means USDT works where the audience is already crypto-native: iGaming, digital goods, and cross-border platforms.
“Checkout experience directly impacts conversion in crypto. With Finassets, merchants get a structured, transparent flow for users, plus the ability to personalize the payment page — from Logo branding to fully customized integrations via API.”
— Vitalijs Feldmanis, CEO of Finassets
Finassets Checkout was built around operational visibility as a first principle. Merchants see the status of every payment in real time — no blockchain explorer needed. The Back Office gives teams:
A multi-brand online casino reduced finance team operational costs by 70% after implementing Finassets — not by cutting headcount, but by eliminating time spent on manual reconciliation.
For high-risk e-commerce, payment infrastructure is not a background function. A frozen processor account means zero revenue until the issue resolves. That can take days or weeks. A checkout that doesn’t confirm payments clearly loses customers at the moment of highest intent.
Finassets is perfect for this operating environment. Structured checkout with full transaction visibility, no chargeback exposure, and a commission starting at 0.40% that scales by volume. Merchants keep operations clean at scale — without depending on processors that can cut access without notice.
Finassets.io is a crypto payment gateway registered in Panama, serving e-commerce merchants and iGaming operators. The platform supports USDT/TRC20 and 70+ cryptocurrencies, with sub-30-second deposit confirmation. It offers all essential crypto payment solutions for B2B businesses, including crypto payment buttons for seamless checkout integration, crypto invoicing for automated billing, and mass payouts for bulk transactions.
Finassets
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: https://www.finassets.io
The post Why E-Commerce Merchants are Replacing Card Processors with USDT Checkout appeared first on The Market Periodical.

