Hidden Costs in U.S. Bill Payments Exceed $100 Billion Annually
A staggering $100 billion is drained from U.S. bill pay organizations every year due to friction in the payment process. New research from PayNearMe reveals that actual acceptance costs are six times higher than the transaction fees companies typically track on their processor invoices, creating a massive financial blind spot.

The report, titled the Payment Experience Gap, argues that businesses fixate on transaction fees while ignoring the systemic costs that make up over 80% of the total expense. In a representative lending model, the true cost per payment reaches $7.22, with only $1.20 attributed to standard fees. The remaining $6.02 stems from support needs, operational inefficiencies, and customer experience hurdles.
For a mid-market lender processing 500,000 payments annually, these hidden expenses total roughly $3 million. Support costs serve as the primary drain at $2.70 per transaction, followed by operational burdens like ACH returns and manual reconciliation at $2.01. Friction—such as payment abandonment or delays—adds another $1.31. According to Mike Kaplan, Chief Revenue Officer at PayNearMe, this discrepancy is a significant oversight that keeps companies from optimizing cash flow. The findings suggest that by shifting focus from simple transaction processing to comprehensive Payment Experience Management, organizations can transform these back-office costs into a measurable operational advantage.
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