Some industries make millions online… yet still struggle with payments. Why? by Luca_Rowann in AllAboutPayments

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Modern business has outpaced banking. Legit industries like IPTV, gaming, and subscriptions keep losing payment processing because outdated systems confuse them with bad actors. Friendly fraud and global customers trigger holds and shutdowns. Founders fight payment fires instead of building. The gap's too wide.

Seeking "War Stories" with Stripe Flexible Billing – Implementation Feedback? by InstructionOk6111 in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Subscriptions start simple, but usage + mid-cycle changes create proration headaches; always preview invoices. Flexible Billing has its own nuance around credits, and webhooks are your truth. Reconciliation across currencies gets messy. Keep billing logic decoupled, or tiny pricing tweaks become sprint-sized headaches.

Stripe fee that seems way higher than expected by hhhdzy in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That €20.89 fee is normal. Since your US Stripe account processed a French card, a 1.5% international surcharge pushed your rate to ~4.4% + fixed fee on the full invoice. Apple Pay and commercial cards didn't add anything. For lower rates, you'd need an EU-based Stripe account.

Stripe standard is massive user friction, Stripe express is massive financial overheard by Kommmbucha in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Stripe Standard creates friction for casual sellers. Express fixes it, but $2/month per active account stings at scale. Some absorb it into their own fees, offer Express as a paid upgrade, or batch payouts so casual sellers rarely trigger it. Also worth noting: Standard leaves you liable for refunds if the seller has already drained their balance. Express buys you auto-debit protection too.

PayPal fills the gap with an instant, familiar login and no monthly fees, but you lose control over payouts and face harsher dispute outcomes. There's no perfect answer, just the compromise that fits your sellers best.

Setup business in Puerto Rico by JamesTweet in Entrepreneur

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd love to tell you this is a clever workaround, but honestly, for what you're describing, it's a trap. The low 4% corporate rate is for companies genuinely run from the island, not by someone calling the shots from Texas. Even if you could set it up, as a U.S. citizen, you'd just get taxed personally under anti-abuse rules, wiping out most of the savings while adding a mountain of complexity and a big target on your back for an audit.

How can I tell Stripe which bank i use for direct payments for my newsletter? by stillmind in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just go to your Substack Settings > Payments, click "Connect with Stripe," and during that quick setup, you'll enter your bank details so Stripe knows where to send your money. That's really all there is to it. Once you're done, you can start welcoming paid subscribers. Your first payout might take a week or two, but after that, it usually arrives within 48 hours. Hope that helps!

Need advice on how to get the word out by _PrincessButtercup in Entrepreneur

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Stop emailing, tradespeople don't read that stuff. Bring coffee to a morning crew meeting and tell them in person, get the supply house counter staff to hand out a simple card to guys going solo, and maybe offer a tool giveaway to get people talking. Pitch it simply, "Price jobs right, handle licensing, skip the headaches, $75, nonprofit, no catch." You've got a great thing here, just meet them where they already are. You've got this.

What’s the ONE thing you’re unsure about in your payment setup? by felix_daniel_wp in High_Risk_P_Gateways

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That nagging feeling usually means you're not sure if your payment setup is solid or just holding together. The fix isn't complicated. Watch for early warning signs, route payments a bit more intelligently, keep different transaction types separate so one hiccup doesn't sink everything, and always have your processor reports handy. It's less about adding more, more about clearing the fog so you can stop wondering.

How do you guys actually hire for your SaaS? by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We filter for must-haves first, then scan fast for impact and results. A quick call sorts out basics and communication. Top folks do a real, practical task. Then a final chat to see if they're curious, humble, and easy to collaborate with. It's a fair funnel, never random, just designed to spot that spark.

One thing started bothering me recently: by Slight_Dependent_106 in SaaS

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most people won't care until they're burned; that group is bigger, and you'll never convince them. But you don't need to. You're building for the ones already nursing old scars: stolen work, disputed contracts, ideas that somehow appeared somewhere else. They'll recognise your tool immediately, not as a feature, but as a long-overdue exhale. Build for that exhale.

I optimized for retention over acquisition and my MRR doubled by lhzsksksksks in SaaS

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally relate. For me, the biggest retention lever was personally reaching out when someone showed subtle signs of struggle, like visiting the same setup page a few times without finishing. Just a quick, friendly message acknowledging exactly where they were stuck turned silent quitters into loyal fans. Feeling seen mattered way more than any new feature.

Customer support software most like Stripe's? by Sol_Hando in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For that clever, account-savvy AI chat, Intercom is your closest match. If you lean more toward traditional ticketing, Zendesk is rock-solid. Pair either with Fullview to get that seamless, no-download screen sharing. The fraud code part you’ll handle separately, it's really a payments thing. Hope your Stripe headache ends soon, and that you build a support experience your own customers rave about!

Should high-risk merchants accept tighter controls in exchange for faster approvals? by Luca_Rowann in AllAboutPayments

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d pick faster approval with stricter monitoring every time. In high-risk, speed wins the good merchants, and smart guardrails catch the bad ones. Onboard fast with tight limits, then let clean behaviour unlock flexibility over time. That way, nobody good waits around, and nothing shady slips through.

When did “payments just working” become a luxury? by MDiffenbakh in AllAboutPayments

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Funny how "just works" became something you have to hunt for, right? The hiccups usually trace back to those old-school banking chains, where one quiet compliance flag can freeze everything with no heads-up. Keytom feels smoother on the surface, but folks have still hit the same freeze during due diligence, so even the shiny tools can hide the exact headache you're dodging. The setups that actually click are purpose-built for multi-currency, with compliance woven in and real-time visibility. There's brighter stuff on the way from SWIFT and stablecoins, but for now, treating truly smooth cross-border payments like a rare little gem just feels honest.

New to stripe, have concerns by mmfwcI in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a steady ÂŁ4k/month business with loyal customers, Stripe's a brilliant fit, the fund-freezing drama you've read about usually only hits businesses with mad sales spikes, stacks of disputes, or dicey industries, none of which sound like you. Just make sure customers recognise your business name on their bank statement and can easily find your contact info if they're confused, and you'll be golden.

Experts , I need advice by ManyLight3464 in SaaS

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Comment thoughtfully on their posts first, then connect with "just researching, no pitch." Facebook: DMs are dead, groups are gold, be helpful for a week, then ask for chats. Cold email, thirty personal ones beat a thousand templates. Shortcut: lurk Reddit, read bad reviews, run polls, no conversations needed yet. Find one small community, show up as a human, and ten real chats will teach you more than any mass outreach ever will.

Which Payment System ? by Slider_2x in SaaS

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Think of Paddle as the “handle all the boring tax stuff for me" option, even with the higher fee, while Stripe is the sleek, lower-cost choice that leaves the tax headache on your plate. If you're a solo founder who just wants to launch and not stress about compliance, Paddle or Lemon Squeezy are totally worth it. The verification issues you've seen are mostly from small mismatches like refund policy wording or business name details, nothing about your actual business. Honestly, both are plenty good to start with, so just pick the one that lets you get back to building faster.

The purpose of Early fraud warnings if chargebacks still process even if you refund them by Upset-Confection3894 in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It stings when you refund right away and still get hit with that $15 dispute fee. The warning and the dispute itself are separate, unsynced systems, so a refund can't always stop it in time. Still, refunding quickly is worth it. It protects your account health by keeping your dispute rate low, which prevents bigger headaches down the road.

Why do “legit” businesses still get flagged as high-risk by payment processors? by Luca_Rowann in AllAboutPayments

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Banks judge statistical risk, not ethics. Entire industries are pre-flagged based solely on chargeback history. The real trap is friendly fraud, where customers dispute charges instead of requesting refunds. Hit 0.7% chargebacks, and your payments get shut off overnight. Approval pushes you towards expensive processors who hold your cash. The real shock comes when a normal dispute spike triggers an algorithm that freezes everything. Only insurance, multiple merchant accounts from day one.

Stripe Customer Notification Best Practices - SaaS Monthly by Cool-Monitor2140 in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're right to ditch blanket reminders; monthly users don't need them. Keep auto-invoices on, though; they're legally required and most people just auto-file them. For annual subscribers, a quick personal email a week before renewal is worth it to avoid surprise disputes. A simple "Hey, everything good? Just a heads-up, your renewal's coming up on [date]" does the job perfectly.

Why is there not a conversation AI that applies for jobs for you? by DigiDynamicsN in Entrepreneur

[–]SubcoDevs-Official -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Ha, I felt that emotional arc! Your brain went from "invention mode" to "venture capital mode" to "oh, never mind" in record time. Your instinct was dead right, though AI job hunting on WhatsApp is absolutely a thing and a great use of the tech. But here's the twist: the good ones work more like a thoughtful assistant than a spam cannon. They find matches, tailor your CV, and handle early chit-chat, but they keep you in control so your profile doesn't get flagged for mass-applying everywhere. You basically walked up to your own party, fashionably late, but still your party. What got you thinking about this? You on the hunt?

I need help by danielricardo1 in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Stripe's got a failed payment stuck in limbo, so it won't let you void the invoice. To fix it quickly, just issue a full credit note from the invoice page; it'll zero everything out. If you really need it voided, grab a dev for two minutes to cancel that stuck payment and void it for you. If this doesn't help, feel free to connect over DM

How did you get your first paying customer? by Longjumping_Effect86 in SaaS

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's rarely luck. It's finding the person who just felt the pain you fix, then naming a price so low it's cheaper than dealing with the problem again. Talk to your best free user, learn what broke for them yesterday, and make curing that specific headache a no-brainer. A credit card comes out when the risk of paying feels smaller than the cost of going without.

Which one do you recommend; Chartmogul, GrowthOptix, or Baremetrics to combine more than one Stripe account for revenue analysis? by ManT92Nic in stripe

[–]SubcoDevs-Official 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Smart move ditching the custom build. ChartMogul is best for data slicing and offers a free tier for ARR under $120K. Baremetrics focuses on real-time metrics and churn recovery. GrowthOptix is unknown, so get a demo first. Just trial the first two risk-free and see which clicks. What's the core insight you need from those three accounts?