Most SaaS platforms and marketplaces earn through subscriptions or seat licenses. But a growing number are unlocking a higher-margin revenue stream by embedding financial services directly into their products. Embedded finance payment solutions give non-financial companies the infrastructure to process payments, issue cards, extend credit, and manage payouts, enabling them to earn from every transaction that flows through their platform.
How the Revenue Model Works
Traditional software charges for access. Embedded finance payment solutions add a payment take rate on top, meaning platforms earn a percentage of every dollar their users send or receive. Some layer in card interchange income, instant payout fees, and revenue-based financing on top of that.
A vertical SaaS platform serving property managers, for example, can collect rent payments, charge a per-transaction fee, offer landlords instant payouts for a small premium, and extend short-term working capital to property owners, all within the same dashboard. Every financial feature becomes a separate, recurring revenue line.
Why Retention Follows Revenue
The revenue case for embedded finance payment solutions grows stronger when you factor in what financial features do to churn. Research from Airwallex found that integrating financial services can reduce customer churn by up to 64%. When a platform manages a business’s payouts, card spending, and working capital, switching costs rise sharply. The platform stops being a vendor and becomes financial infrastructure for the businesses it serves.
B2B Platforms Are Moving Fastest
The B2B segment leads adoption. Embedded finance payment solutions are becoming prevalent in healthcare, property management, and field services. Investor decks from 2025 to 2026 consistently list payment take rate and lending attachment as projected revenue lines. Embedded finance payment solutions work especially well in B2B because transaction volumes are high and financial needs recur on every billing cycle.
Getting the Foundation Right to Maximize Revenue
Capturing this revenue requires the right partner selection. Compliance is the first filter: platforms need a banking-as-a-service provider that handles KYC, AML, and regional data privacy requirements by default. Building that layer independently delays revenue and introduces regulatory exposure. The second consideration is fee structure. Some providers charge per transaction; others by volume or feature usage. Modeling cost against expected transaction volume before launch prevents margin erosion as the business scales.
Conclusion
Platforms that treat payments as a core product, not a checkout step, unlock revenue that subscriptions alone cannot match. Embedded finance payment solutions turn transaction volume into a compounding growth engine, with every new user adding to the take rate base.
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Contactless PaymentsDigital PaymentsOpen BankingAuthor - Abhinand Anil
Abhinand is an experienced writer who takes up new angles on the stories that matter, thanks to his expertise in Media Studies. He is an avid reader, movie buff and gamer who is fascinated about the latest and greatest in the tech world.