Day 2: How a Credit Card Transaction Works – Authorization, Clearing, and Settlement
August 11, 2025 | by Jaffar Ali Mohamedkasim

When you swipe, tap, or enter your credit card details online, the process behind the scenes is far more complex than it looks. A single transaction can involve multiple steps and several key players — all happening within seconds.
🔹 Step 1: Authorization
- What happens: The merchant requests approval from the cardholder’s bank (issuer) to ensure the card is valid and has sufficient credit.
- Flow:
- The cardholder presents their card to the merchant.
- The merchant sends the transaction details to the acquirer via a payment processor.
- The card network (Visa, MasterCard, etc.) routes the request to the issuer.
- The issuer approves or declines the transaction.
- Outcome: If approved, the transaction amount is held (reserved) on the cardholder’s account.
🔹 Step 2: Clearing
- What happens: Transaction details are shared between the acquirer, card network, and issuer for record-keeping and reconciliation.
- Flow:
- Merchants batch transactions at the end of the day and send them to the acquirer.
- The acquirer passes them to the card network, which forwards them to the issuer.
- Outcome: The issuer prepares to transfer funds to the acquirer.
🔹 Step 3: Settlement
- What happens: Funds move between the issuer and acquirer, minus applicable fees.
- Flow:
- The issuer sends the payment to the card network.
- The card network passes it to the acquirer.
- The acquirer deposits the amount into the merchant’s account.
- Outcome: The merchant receives their payment, and the cardholder sees the charge on their statement.
📝 Quick Example
- Customer: Buys a $100 shirt using a credit card.
- Authorization: Bank confirms $100 is available and reserves it.
- Clearing: Transaction details are sent to the bank for processing.
- Settlement: Merchant gets $97 (after fees), customer owes $100 to their bank.
✅ Summary
Understanding authorization, clearing, and settlement is key to grasping the full payment lifecycle. Tomorrow, we’ll dive into Interchange Fees & Other Costs in Credit Card Transactions — because knowing the money flow is just as important as the technology behind it.
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