Why the payment gateway matters for invoices
The payment gateway you choose does not just move money. It decides how much of the invoice you keep, how quickly you can spend it, and whether the client actually clicks "pay." For freelancers and small businesses, a single percentage point on a $5,000 invoice is $50. Add a currency conversion margin, and the difference can be $100–$300.
This tool compares Stripe, PayPal, Wise, Square and Venmo across the four dimensions that matter most for invoices: processing fees, currency support, payout speed, and integration difficulty. Enter your invoice amount and scenario, and it recommends the best payment method for your situation.
Stripe vs PayPal fees: the headline numbers
For US freelancers billing domestic clients in USD:
- Stripe: roughly 2.9% + $0.30 per card transaction.
- PayPal: 3.49% + $0.49 for PayPal/Venmo invoicing; 2.99% + $0.49 if paid by standard credit/debit card.
- Wise: free to receive a local bank transfer; conversion is roughly 0.6% plus a small fixed fee.
- Square: 3.3% + $0.30 for Square Invoices (online/card-not-present).
- Venmo: 1.9% + $0.10 for business-profile payments, but US-only and only professional for small, casual invoices.
The gap widens on international payments. Stripe adds a 1.5% international-card surcharge on top of its 2.9% + $0.30 base rate, plus a 1% currency-conversion fee if your payout currency differs. PayPal's currency conversion margin can be 3% or more. Wise usually undercuts both for bank transfers because it avoids card networks.
Currency support and conversion costs
Stripe supports more than 135 currencies, PayPal more than 100, and Wise around 50. That sounds like Stripe wins on coverage, but coverage is not the same as cost. If your client pays in a different currency, the provider converts it to your payout currency at a rate that includes a margin.
- Stripe: mid-market rate plus roughly 1% conversion if settlement requires currency conversion.
- PayPal: retail rate that often includes a 3–4% margin.
- Wise: mid-market rate with a transparent 0.6% average fee.
For same-currency domestic invoices, conversion is irrelevant. For international invoices, Wise is almost always the cheapest way to receive funds, as long as your client is comfortable with a bank transfer.
Payout speed and cash flow
Payout speed is the time from "client paid" to "money available to spend." It matters more than freelancers often realise.
- Venmo: instant to a Venmo balance; 1–3 days to a bank.
- Wise: usually hours, sometimes same day, for bank transfers.
- PayPal: instant to your PayPal balance; 1–3 days to a linked bank.
- Square: 1–2 business days.
- Stripe: typically two business days for the first payout, then faster for established accounts.
If you invoice on Net 15 terms, a two-day payout delay is a small fraction of your wait. If you need the money the same week, Wise, Venmo, or PayPal are faster.
Integration difficulty
Not every freelancer needs a hosted checkout page. Some just want a link to paste into an invoice.
- PayPal / Venmo / Wise: copy-paste links or payment requests. No code required.
- Square: shareable checkout links; optional in-person hardware.
- Stripe: payment links work without code, but subscriptions, webhooks, and custom checkout require developer work or a third-party integration.
If you are sending a one-off PDF invoice, a simple link is enough. If you are running a SaaS product with monthly subscriptions, Stripe's API becomes worth the effort.
How to choose the best payment method for your invoice
There is no single best gateway for every invoice. The right choice depends on a few questions:
- Is your client in the same country? International invoices usually favour Wise for bank transfers or Stripe for card checkouts.
- Is this a one-time invoice or recurring billing? Stripe and PayPal both support recurring payments; Wise is better for one-off bank transfers.
- Does your client have a preference? A client who trusts PayPal will complete payment more often if you offer PayPal, even if Stripe is cheaper.
- What is your top priority: lowest fees, fastest payout, easiest setup, or brand trust?
Use the tool above to plug in your answers. It scores the providers and returns a best pick plus a runner-up, with an estimated fee for each.
Quick rules for common invoice scenarios
- Small US domestic invoice under $300: Venmo has the lowest fee, but only if the client is comfortable with it. PayPal.me is a safer fallback.
- Standard freelance invoice in US/EU: Stripe is usually the cheapest and cleanest card option.
- Client already uses PayPal: Offer PayPal. The slightly higher fee is often worth the higher completion rate.
- International B2B invoice: Wise is usually cheapest. Receive the client's local currency by bank transfer and convert at a mid-market rate.
- Subscription or SaaS: Stripe is the strongest choice because of its billing, tax, and webhook tools.
- Also sell in person: Square makes it easy to keep online and in-person payments in one account.
How this comparison tool works
The calculator uses approximate 2026 US rate cards for each provider. Stripe international estimates combine the 2.9% + $0.30 base rate, a 1.5% international-card surcharge, and a 1% currency-conversion fee when conversion is needed. Square uses the 3.3% + $0.30 Square Invoices rate. It applies domestic or international rates based on your client's location, adds currency conversion where relevant, and scores each provider against your chosen priority. The result is an estimate, not a quote. Always check the provider's current pricing for your country before making a final decision.
Final tip: offer a fallback
Many freelancers get the best results by offering one primary method and one fallback. A common setup is Stripe for card payments and Wise for international bank transfers, with PayPal as a fallback for clients who prefer it. That way you optimise fees without losing payments to payment-method friction.