Credit card networks pass information between the merchant’s acquiring bank and an issuing bank or card issuer (the financial institution that issued you a card on behalf of a network like Mastercard or Visa) to decide whether you can make a purchase and to facilitate the purchase.

How Credit Card Networks Work

While these payment networks operate behind the scenes, the process is fairly straightforward. Below is a step-by-step example of a credit card network’s function when you use your card to make a purchase.  The whole process takes place within seconds. 

Types of Credit Card Networks

Four primary companies act as credit card networks for payment processing:

Visa: This is a payment network only; that is, it doesn’t issue credit cards directly to consumers, though you will see the Visa logo appearing on many cards to identify the company’s association with the card’s payment network. Visa also oversees the Visa Signature benefits associated with certain credit cards, such as premium rental car privileges and hotel perks. Mastercard: Again, this is only a credit card network, but it has its own suite of card protections and benefits, such as identity theft protection and extended warranties. American Express: American Express is a credit card network and card issuer that both issues credit cards and processes payments for cards bearing its logo. It also offers cardholder benefits like travel insurance. Discover: This is both a card network and card issuer, offering benefits like secondary rental car collision insurance.

Retail store credit cards may operate on their own, smaller credit card networks, limiting you to making purchases with your card only at those stores.

What Credit Card Networks Mean for You

The payment network your card operates in is important, because merchants aren’t required to accept credit cards from every payment network. A grocery store or gas station may accept Mastercard or Visa but not American Express or Discover credit cards. If you’re traveling, card networks overseas may vary from what you’re used to in the United States. If you routinely spend money at the same merchants or have multiple credit cards operating in different card networks, that might not be a problem, but if you’re planning to travel outside of the United States and only have cards from one network, like American Express, be sure to view the maps of acceptance locations on the card network’s website. Acquiring banks incur interchange and other fees to process card payments, so merchants sometimes choose and accept credit card networks based on cost. Fees vary, but some networks are more expensive for merchants to use than others. American Express, for instance, tends to charge higher fees than its competitors. If a retailer is keeping a close eye on the bottom line, it may opt to accept payments only on low-fee card networks, which might be a money-saver for them but inconvenient for you.