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How Do Marketplace Split Payments Work?

How Do Marketplace Split Payments Work?

Marketplace split payments take one customer payment and divide it between everyone owed a share of the order: each vendor's earnings, the marketplace's commission, and processing fees. The split happens in one of two ways — at the payment processor as the charge settles, or after the money lands in the marketplace's own account.

That second sentence is where most explanations stop too early. Who holds the money decides who needs a payment license, who handles refunds, and how fast vendors get paid.

What is a marketplace split payment?

A split payment (sometimes called a divided or disbursed payment) is the mechanism that lets a buyer pay once while several parties get paid. A regular online store never needs it: one seller, one bank account. A marketplace order can span several independent sellers who each expect an exact, auditable amount. So the single charge has to be broken apart somewhere between the buyer's card and the vendors' bank accounts.

Numbers make it concrete. A buyer spends £100 on your marketplace: £60 with vendor A, £40 with vendor B, and you charge a 15% commission. One checkout, one card charge. Then the split: vendor A is owed £51, vendor B is owed £34, and you keep £15, minus whatever the card processor takes, typically around 1.5–3% plus a fixed fee depending on region. Whether you absorb that processing fee or deduct it from vendor payouts is a policy decision, and one worth writing into your vendor agreement before the first sale.

What happens between checkout and payout?

Every split payment follows the same five moves, whatever software runs it:

  1. The buyer pays once. One cart, one charge, even when the items come from three different vendors.
  2. The order is split. Each vendor gets a sub-order containing only their items, quantities, and shipping duties.
  3. Commission rules run. Percentage, flat fee, or per-vendor rates are applied to each vendor's lines, producing an exact payout amount per vendor.
  4. The money routes. Either the processor divides the settled funds directly, or the full amount lands in the marketplace's account for later distribution.
  5. Vendors are paid on a schedule — instantly, weekly, monthly, or a fixed number of days after fulfillment — and the marketplace keeps its commission.

Steps 1–3 are pure software. Step 4 is where the architecture and the regulation collide, and where your gateway choice starts to matter. It gets its own section.

Split at the processor vs. collect-then-payout

There are two ways to run step 4, and vendors of marketplace software rarely spell out which one they use.

Split at the processor. The payment provider divides the charge as it settles, routing each vendor's share into a connected sub-account it controls. The platform never legally holds vendor money. This is what Stripe Connect, Mollie for Platforms, and Adyen for Platforms are built for. One catch that surprises people: even inside Stripe Connect, a cart spanning multiple vendors can't use a simple destination charge. Stripe's own documentation directs multi-vendor carts to "separate charges and transfers," where the charge lands on the platform account and per-vendor transfers follow. The instant, at-source split mostly exists for single-seller transactions like a rideshare trip.

Collect, then pay out. The full order amount settles into the marketplace's account. Software computes each vendor's balance, and payouts go out on a schedule through whatever rails suit each vendor — Stripe transfers, PayPal, or a plain bank transfer. This is how most real marketplaces operate day to day, because it puts the operator in control. You decide how long money is held against returns and chargebacks, and when payouts go out.

Split at the processorCollect, then pay out
Where buyer money settlesPSP-controlled sub-accountsThe marketplace's account
Who holds vendor fundsThe licensed PSPThe marketplace operator
Licensing exposureCovered by the PSP's licenseMay need a license if funds are held
Multi-vendor cartsVia "separate charges and transfers"Native — it's just accounting
Refunds and returnsReverse transfers through the PSPRefund the buyer, deduct from the next payout
Payout timingConstrained by PSP settlement rulesAny schedule you choose
Works with Shopify checkoutNoYes

The licensing row is not theoretical. Under the EU's PSD2, a platform acting for both the buyer and the seller can no longer rely on the "commercial agent" exemption. Stripe's PSD2 guide for marketplaces explains that such platforms need either their own payment institution license or a licensed provider in the flow of funds. US law raises a parallel question through state money transmitter rules. In both cases the practical answer is the same: keep a licensed PSP holding the money, or keep the holding period short and structured, and have a lawyer review it.

Choosing a payment gateway for a multi-vendor marketplace

The gateway question is really two questions: what charges the buyer, and what pays the vendors. They don't have to be the same system.

  • Stripe Connect — the default choice for a reason: strong documentation, KYC onboarding for vendors built in, and transfers that support scheduled, automated payouts. Weakest where Stripe itself has no coverage.
  • PayPal — vendors only need to share a PayPal business email to receive payouts, which makes onboarding almost frictionless for small sellers. Fees run higher than bank rails.
  • Mollie — a strong European option; its marketplace payments guide is candid about the licensing questions above, which says something about the company.
  • Adyen for Platforms — enterprise-grade, priced and contracted accordingly. Overkill below serious volume.
  • Airwallex — worth a look when your vendors sit in many countries and multi-currency payouts would otherwise eat margin in FX fees.

Speed matters more than most operators assume. Marketplace sellers wait an average of 3.3 days for their proceeds, according to a PYMNTS/Visa survey, and payout reliability is one of the first things prospective vendors ask about. A predictable weekly payout you always honor beats a theoretical instant payout you can't sustain.

How marketplace split payments work on Shopify

Shopify checkout settles every order to a single merchant account: the store owner's. No gateway can peel off a vendor's share at checkout. So a Shopify marketplace always runs the collect-then-payout model: the store collects the full amount, and an app handles the splitting.

Garnet Marketplace, the Shopify multi-vendor marketplace app, does this in three layers. Orders are split into per-vendor sub-orders the moment they come in. Commission is computed per vendor line, with the full calculation visible to both sides so payouts never turn into support tickets. Payouts then go out through Stripe Connect, PayPal or Venmo, Mollie, Airwallex, or manual bank transfer. Vendors pick from the methods you enable, so a hobbyist seller with only a PayPal email and an established brand with a Stripe account can coexist on the same marketplace.

Schedules are where the collect-then-payout model earns its keep. With automated payouts, you can pay every Wednesday at 10 AM, every first Tuesday of the month, or a fixed number of days after fulfillment. A marketplace offering 14-day returns will typically release vendor money on day 21, after the return window closes. Try doing that with an instant at-source split.

Two adjacent decisions come bundled with the money flow. Collecting the buyer's full payment shapes who the legal seller is (the agency vs. merchant of record breakdown covers both structures), and it can make you the party responsible for sales tax, which our post on marketplace facilitator rules walks through. For the full picture of gateways, commissions, and payouts on a Shopify marketplace, see the payment integrations overview.

FAQ

Does Shopify support split payments natively?

No. Shopify checkout settles the full order to one merchant account — the store owner's. There's no way to route a slice of a Shopify Payments charge to a third party at checkout. Shopify marketplaces split the money after settlement instead: a multi-vendor app computes each vendor's share and pays it out.

Do I need a payment license to split payments on my marketplace?

Usually not, as long as a licensed provider holds the funds. In the EU and UK, PSD2 removed the commercial agent exemption for platforms acting for both buyer and seller, and in the US, holding other people's money can trigger money transmitter rules. Routing funds through Stripe, Mollie, or a similar licensed PSP keeps you outside that scope — confirm your setup with a lawyer.

Can one order be split between several vendors?

Yes — that's the normal case, not the edge case. A buyer fills one cart from three vendors and pays once; the marketplace splits the order into per-vendor sub-orders, applies each vendor's commission rate, and each vendor sees only their own items, earnings, and shipping duties.

Who pays the card processing fees in a split payment?

Whoever your commission policy says. Some marketplaces absorb processing fees inside their commission; others deduct a proportional share from each vendor's payout. Both are legitimate — what matters is stating the rule in your vendor agreement and showing the math on every payout line.

How fast do vendors get paid after a split payment?

A PYMNTS/Visa survey found marketplace sellers wait 3.3 days on average for sales proceeds. In practice the schedule is a policy you set: many marketplaces pay weekly or monthly, and marketplaces with returns windows hold payouts until the window closes — for example, paying 21 days after fulfillment when buyers get 14 days to return.