WooCommerce Payment Processing Fee Calculator

This calculator estimates payment processing fees for your WooCommerce store using a simple, decision-grade model: percent rate plus fixed fee per transaction, scaled by your order volume.

Use it to forecast fee load, compare processors, validate price floors, and avoid margin surprises when AOV shifts or order count spikes.

Built for decision-making: guardrails, planning targets, and sensitivity checks.

WooCommerce Payment Processing Fee Calculator

Calculate processing fee totals, effective rate, per-order fee and net received. Designed for clean fee planning and pricing guardrails.

Presets fill fee inputs (editable)

Calculator

Ready
Average order value used to model percent fees.
Transaction count for fixed fee totals.
Optional additional percent load (cross-border, special method, etc.).
Optional: derive implied orders from goal volume.
Enter Order Value, Orders, and fees, then click Calculate.

Results

Total Fees
$0.00
Effective Rate
0.00%
Fee per Order
$0.00
Net Received
$0.00
Total: –
MetricValue
Total Volume$0.00
How it is calculated (Formulas)

Total volume = AOV x Orders

Percent fee = Total volume x (rate pct + extra pct)

Fixed fee = Orders x fixed fee

Total fees = Percent fee + Fixed fee

Effective rate = Total fees / Total volume x 100

Fee per order = Total fees / Orders

Net received = Total volume – Total fees

Fee Load Diagnosis
Enter inputs to see rating.
AOV Risk Note
Fixed fees dominate at low AOV.
Planning Guardrail
Target effective rate check.
Implied Orders
From volume goal and AOV.
Decision Notes

Notice something off? Tell us — we fix fast.

EcommerceProfitTools calculators are built to be practical and decision-ready, but real ecommerce data can vary by marketplace, category rules, fee schedules, and tax setup. If you spot a mistake, a broken input, an incorrect formula, or a link that doesn’t work, please email us — we’ll review and correct it.

Include: page URL + screenshots (if possible) + the numbers you entered + what result you expected.
Best case: a Seller Central reference or fee schedule note (marketplace/region) so we can align logic correctly.
Email support
support@ecommerceprofittools.com We use reports to improve accuracy and UX across all tools.
Note: results are estimates for planning and comparison. Always validate final numbers against your marketplace statements and professional accounting where applicable.

Fee Analytics and Decision Rules

Interpretation
Payment fees are a structural cost. They compress margin on every order and scale with revenue and order count. The most decision-grade metric is the effective rate: total fees divided by total processed volume.
Decision rules
If effective rate rises above your planning target, you need a structure fix: increase AOV, change pricing mix, reduce extra loads, or renegotiate terms. Do not scale volume blindly.
Planning logic
Percent fees scale with volume. Fixed fees scale with order count. As AOV falls, fixed fees become dominant, and effective rate increases even when the headline rate looks unchanged.
Common mistakes
Modeling only percent rate, forgetting fixed fee, ignoring extra loads, assuming effective rate stays stable during discounts, and comparing providers without controlling for AOV.
Sensitivity explanation
AOV shifts change effective rate. AOV down means fixed fee share up. This is why coupons and low-ticket offers can silently destroy profit even if conversion improves. Test downside before scaling.
Pro tips
Use fee modeling together with Break-even and Profit tools. Fee load is not standalone: it interacts with shipping, returns and paid traffic. The correct approach is constraints first, then strategy.

FAQ

Payment Processing Fees in WooCommerce: Definitions, Mechanics, Edge Cases

Payment processing fees are one of the most underestimated margin drains in WooCommerce. The true fee load is not only the headline percent rate. Real cost depends on order count, AOV, and extra loads, which is why effective rate is the correct metric for decision-making.

Definitions
Percent fee applies to volume and scales with revenue. Fixed fee applies per transaction and scales with order count. Effective rate combines both: total fees divided by total volume.
Mechanics
Effective rate increases when AOV decreases because fixed fees become a larger share of each order. Promotions, bundles, and pricing strategy directly change fee economics through AOV.
Edge cases
Low-ticket products and heavy discounts can make fixed fees dominant. International payment mixes can add extra percent loads. High order count with stable volume usually signals an AOV problem for fee efficiency.
How to apply
Use effective rate as a constraint in pricing and scaling decisions. If fee load is above your target, fix structure first: raise AOV, change offer mix, reduce extra loads, or reprice.
Business workflow
Step 1: model fees with AOV and order count. Step 2: plug fee totals into Profit and Break-even models. Step 3: test sensitivity under AOV downside. Step 4: only then scale spend and discounts.
Rule of thumb: if your effective rate changes a lot when AOV moves, your margin is fragile. Protect pricing discipline with break-even floors.

This fee tool is decision-grade because it models the real mechanics: percent fees scale with volume, fixed fees scale with order count, and effective rate is the metric that survives AOV shifts.

Constraints define strategy. If fee load violates your targets, the solution is structural: pricing, bundling, offer mix, and processor terms – not just more volume.

Decision-grade tools for serious ecommerce operators.