Alternatives to Razorpay logo

Alternatives to Razorpay

PayPal, Stripe, Paytm, Braintree, and Blockchain are the most popular alternatives and competitors to Razorpay.
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What is Razorpay and what are its top alternatives?

Razorpay is the only payments solution in India that allows businesses to accept, process and disburse payments with its product suite. It gives you access to all payment modes including credit card, debit card, netbanking, UPI and more.
Razorpay is a tool in the Payment Services category of a tech stack.

Top Alternatives to Razorpay

  • PayPal
    PayPal

    PayPal is an online payments and money transfer service that allows you to send money via email, phone, text message or Skype. They offer products to both individuals and businesses alike, including online vendors, auction sites and corporate users. PayPal connects effortlessly to bank accounts and credit cards. PayPal Mobile is one of PayPal’s newest products. It allows you to send payments by text message or by using PayPal’s mobile browser. ...

  • Stripe
    Stripe

    Stripe makes it easy for developers to accept credit cards on the web.

  • Paytm
    Paytm

    It is a digital payments platform that allows you to transfer cash into the integrated wallet via online banking, debit cards, and credit cards, or even by depositing cash via select banks and partners. ...

  • Braintree
    Braintree

    Braintree replaces traditional payment gateways and merchant accounts. From one touch payments, to mobile SDKs and international sales, we provide everything you need to start accepting payments today. ...

  • Blockchain
    Blockchain

    It is a bitcoin block explorer service, as well as a cryptocurrency wallet supporting bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, and Ethereum. ...

  • Stripe Billing
    Stripe Billing

    A set of billing and subscription tools for developers and business people. Developers can use out-of-the-box functionality to get started quickly or use the composable API building blocks to design fully customized subscription logic and pricing models. Business people can create and manage subscriptions and invoices—and view detailed financial reports. ...

  • Adyen
    Adyen

    A payments technology company that provides a single global platform to accept payments anywhere in the world. Businesses can process payments across online, mobile and in-store (POS) with over 250 payment methods and 187 currencies. ...

  • Chargebee
    Chargebee

    Chargebee is a subscription billing platform that lets you bill, manage and understand your SaaS or subscription based eCommerce business easily. ...

Razorpay alternatives & related posts

PayPal logo

PayPal

19.3K
665
Send Money, Pay Online or Set Up a Merchant Account
19.3K
665
PROS OF PAYPAL
  • 196
    Most known service
  • 135
    Consumers know it
  • 113
    It's available for many countries
  • 70
    Easy
  • 54
    Best way to get paid outside US
  • 35
    Most widely used payment processor
  • 25
    Express Checkout
  • 16
    Consumers trust it
  • 15
    Flexible and secure
  • 6
    Digital Goods for Express Checkout
CONS OF PAYPAL
  • 1
    Not well written recurring payment api
  • 1
    Less countries supported
  • 1
    Harder to get started with

related PayPal posts

Adrien Rey-Jarthon
Shared insights
on
StripeStripePayPalPayPalBitPayBitPay
at

To accept payments on updown.io, we first added support for Stripe which is by far the most popular payment gateway for startups and for a good reason. Their service is of awesome quality: the UI is gorgeous, the integration is easy, the documentation is great, the API is super stable and well thought. I can't recommend it enough.

We then added support for PayPal which is pretty popular for people who have money on it and don't know where to spend it (it can make it feel like you're spending less when it comes from PayPal wallet), or for people who prefer not to enter a credit card on a new website. This was pretty well received and we're currently receiving about 25% of our purchases from PayPal. The documentation and integration is much more painful than with Stripe IMO, I can't recommend them for that, but not having it is basically dodging potential sales.

Finally we more recently added support of BitPay for #Bitcoin and BitcoinCash payments, which was a pretty easy process but not worth the time in the end due to the low usage and the always changing conditions of the network: the transaction fees got huge after price raise and bitcoin because unusable for small payments, they then introduced support for BCH and a newer Bitcoin protocol for lower fees, but then you need a special wallet to pay and in the end it's too cumbersome, even for bitcoin users, to pay with it. I think unless you expect a bit number of payments using cryptocurrencies it's not worth implementing this solution, and better to accept them manually.

See more
Tom Klein

Google Analytics is a great tool to analyze your traffic. To debug our software and ask questions, we love to use Postman and Stack Overflow. Google Drive helps our team to share documents. We're able to build our great products through the APIs by Google Maps, CloudFlare, Stripe, PayPal, Twilio, Let's Encrypt, and TensorFlow.

See more
Stripe logo

Stripe

19K
1.5K
Payments for developers
19K
1.5K
PROS OF STRIPE
  • 302
    Easy setup
  • 292
    Developer friendly
  • 248
    Well-designed api
  • 191
    Great documentation
  • 169
    Clear pricing
  • 75
    Secure
  • 74
    Reliable
  • 63
    Full integration with webhooks
  • 43
    Amazing api
  • 38
    Great customer support
  • 11
    Easy
  • 6
    Credit cards never hit your server - no pci worries
  • 5
    Recurring billing
  • 4
    No merchant account/gateway required
  • 3
    BitCoin
  • 3
    Easy to integrate
  • 2
    Support for SCA (Strong Customer Authentication)
  • 2
    Fast UI
  • 2
    Great app
  • 1
    Beautiful
  • 1
    Payments without own backend (using Stripe Products)
  • 1
    Connect
  • 1
    Checkout.js
  • 1
    Great UI
  • 1
    So easy to use
CONS OF STRIPE
  • 4
    Connect
  • 2
    CANNOT withdraw USD to a Canadian Bank Account
  • 2
    Does NOT have a currency conversion option like Paypal
  • 2
    They keep 25% of the income for 60 days

related Stripe posts

Adrien Rey-Jarthon
Shared insights
on
StripeStripePayPalPayPalBitPayBitPay
at

To accept payments on updown.io, we first added support for Stripe which is by far the most popular payment gateway for startups and for a good reason. Their service is of awesome quality: the UI is gorgeous, the integration is easy, the documentation is great, the API is super stable and well thought. I can't recommend it enough.

We then added support for PayPal which is pretty popular for people who have money on it and don't know where to spend it (it can make it feel like you're spending less when it comes from PayPal wallet), or for people who prefer not to enter a credit card on a new website. This was pretty well received and we're currently receiving about 25% of our purchases from PayPal. The documentation and integration is much more painful than with Stripe IMO, I can't recommend them for that, but not having it is basically dodging potential sales.

Finally we more recently added support of BitPay for #Bitcoin and BitcoinCash payments, which was a pretty easy process but not worth the time in the end due to the low usage and the always changing conditions of the network: the transaction fees got huge after price raise and bitcoin because unusable for small payments, they then introduced support for BCH and a newer Bitcoin protocol for lower fees, but then you need a special wallet to pay and in the end it's too cumbersome, even for bitcoin users, to pay with it. I think unless you expect a bit number of payments using cryptocurrencies it's not worth implementing this solution, and better to accept them manually.

See more
Tom Klein

Google Analytics is a great tool to analyze your traffic. To debug our software and ask questions, we love to use Postman and Stack Overflow. Google Drive helps our team to share documents. We're able to build our great products through the APIs by Google Maps, CloudFlare, Stripe, PayPal, Twilio, Let's Encrypt, and TensorFlow.

See more
Paytm logo

Paytm

37
0
A platform for shopping, mobile recharge, bill payments, movie ticketing experience and more
37
0
PROS OF PAYTM
    Be the first to leave a pro
    CONS OF PAYTM
      Be the first to leave a con

      related Paytm posts

      Braintree logo

      Braintree

      563
      90
      Accept payments in your app or website today
      563
      90
      PROS OF BRAINTREE
      • 25
        Well-designed api
      • 18
        Developer friendly
      • 17
        Easy setup
      • 14
        Reliable
      • 6
        Excellent documentation
      • 4
        Great support
      • 3
        Can use paypal and debit card
      • 2
        Test it without obligation, great SDK/API and prices
      • 1
        Great API, awesome docs
      CONS OF BRAINTREE
      • 1
        Lacking documentation for mobile integrations

      related Braintree posts

      Dear StackShare Community,

      I am seeking inspiration on creating a billing & subscription stack and came across this wonderful website and community.

      From what I understood so far, I need something like Stripe or Braintree to collect payments without dealing with PCI compliance or setting up merchant accounts, etc... Additionally, services like Chargebee, Recurly, Chargify, etc. are said to make life easier when dealing with recurring billing.

      Stated below, I've tried to give you some context on what I want to achieve. I am very curious about your ideas and how you'd configure an optimal stack.

      Project context (very high level):

      • Loyalty program for local merchants (stores, restaurants,...).

      • Customers support their community and merchants by shopping local.

      • Merchants grant points to customers based on a customer's value spent in a store, restaurant, etc.

      • Customers can redeem their points at any participating merchant.

      Billing / Subscription scenarios to be considered:

      (affecting merchants only)

      One-time setup fee

      • What: Merchant pays a setup fee by signing up for the service

      • Where: Order placed on the website

      Monthly retainer fee

      • What: Merchant pays a monthly recurring retainer for the service.

      • Where: Order placed on the website

      Manually initiated payment

      • What: Merchant initiates a payment to top up his virtual points wallet. E.g. pays 100 USD to top up 100000 points which then can be used by the merchant for granting points to customers.

      • Why: Points issued to members need to be paid for by the merchant. We first considered billing the merchants post-ante, e.g. monthly based on the points they've granted to their customers in the last 30 days, but this seems too risky: If they can't / won't pay we'd still have to pay out points to the customers (technically to the merchants where the customers redeem their points). Thus, the pragmatic idea to reduce risk by having the merchants to pre-pay for their points by topping up their balance.

      • Where: Web application (with the merchant logged in)

      • Nice to have: Opt-in for automatically initiated top-ups if a merchant's balance falls below a certain amount.

      Invoicing

      • What: After every transaction (setup, retainer, top-up,...), we need to automatically issue and send (E-Mail) an invoice to the merchant.

      • Nice to have: Customer portal with all their invoices.

      Other potentially relevant parameters

      • Currency: Only Euro

      • Country: Only Germany (so far)

      • Tax: Only one tax rate

      • Payment for setup & retainer: Credit Card; ideally SEPA Direct Debit (but that still causes headache due to the SEPA regulatory and risk of chargebacks still after weeks), PayPal?

      • Payment for top-up: Same as above plus any other that makes sense (Klarna, Sofort, PayPal...)

      Again, thank you very much for sharing your ideas and thoughts! I'd highly appreciate any input :-)

      See more
      Tim Little
      Software Consultant at timlittletech · | 7 upvotes · 112.4K views

      Hi there, I am trying to figure out if it's worth creating a Braintree account to do subscription billing in my Shopify store. The goal is to have as little custom code as possible for the store but be able to do subscription billing services, we already have a PayPal business account, but from the looks of it, we can't use PayWhirl directly with Paypal.

      See more
      Blockchain  logo

      Blockchain

      384
      0
      An incredibly easy method for websites to send and receive bitcoin payments
      384
      0
      PROS OF BLOCKCHAIN
        Be the first to leave a pro
        CONS OF BLOCKCHAIN
          Be the first to leave a con

          related Blockchain posts

          Berkay Belli
          Computer Engineering at Purdue University · | 8 upvotes · 31.8K views
          Shared insights
          on
          CoinbaseCoinbaseBlockchain Blockchain

          I'm planning to build a cryptocurrency wallet app, in the end, I'd like to also add NFT's to the app and be able to access their details (smart contract, token id, blockchain) but I haven't figured out the process on how to do this so far.

          Would it be possible to do these using SDKs like Blockchain /Coinbase or should I start from scratch? If so, which kind of architecture should I use? I am hesitant to use ETH as the starting point as the transaction fees are too high for testing.

          See more
          Stripe Billing logo

          Stripe Billing

          156
          0
          A set of tools for billing and subscriptions
          156
          0
          PROS OF STRIPE BILLING
            Be the first to leave a pro
            CONS OF STRIPE BILLING
              Be the first to leave a con

              related Stripe Billing posts

              Tim Nolet

              Stripe Stripe Billing Vue.js

              When I started building a SaaS from scratch, I adopted the Stripe Billing product for managing plans and subscriptions. At that moment (roughly a year ago) I did not fully realise that this was a new addition to the Stripe product line.

              One year down the road, I can write this decision and support it with technical details on how I implemented Stripe Billing and integrated it with the Checkly backend.

              Key takeaways are:

              • Keep coupling minimal. I hardcode our pricing and plans into the pricing page.

              • Choose good ID's and a good structure to segment product and pricing. This enables grandfathering customers and adding ad hoc new products.

              • Use one or two webhooks to keep things in sync. We use just one webhook.

              See all details with code examples in the linked blog post.

              See more
              Adyen logo

              Adyen

              155
              49
              One integration allows businesses to accept 250 payment methods, from wherever people pay
              155
              49
              PROS OF ADYEN
              • 10
                Great customer support
              • 9
                Truly international solution
              • 8
                Great documentation
              • 6
                Well-designed API
              • 5
                Easy setup
              • 4
                Omni-channel solution
              • 4
                Secure
              • 3
                PCI Compliance
              CONS OF ADYEN
                Be the first to leave a con

                related Adyen posts

                Shared insights
                on
                AdyenAdyenStripeStripe
                at

                We're looking for a payment gateway with a robust and dependable API. We will be accepting recurring payments for premium plans on our website, preferably in as many regions as possible.

                While looking for Stripe alternatives, we found Adyen, which seemed like a viable option - we would love to hear your thoughts!

                I appreciate your time reading this message and hope to hear back from you about your experiences with payment gateways!

                See more
                Rodlene Paul
                Founder at Grace and Paul Llc · | 2 upvotes · 45.7K views
                Shared insights
                on
                StripeStripeAdyenAdyen

                I am developing an MVP; our app will accept money transfers for cross-border payment. Any advice on using Adyen for cross-border payments over Stripe? Please advise

                See more
                Chargebee logo

                Chargebee

                153
                0
                Lets you bill, manage and understand your SaaS or subscription based eCommerce business easily.
                153
                0
                PROS OF CHARGEBEE
                  Be the first to leave a pro
                  CONS OF CHARGEBEE
                    Be the first to leave a con

                    related Chargebee posts

                    Dear StackShare Community,

                    I am seeking inspiration on creating a billing & subscription stack and came across this wonderful website and community.

                    From what I understood so far, I need something like Stripe or Braintree to collect payments without dealing with PCI compliance or setting up merchant accounts, etc... Additionally, services like Chargebee, Recurly, Chargify, etc. are said to make life easier when dealing with recurring billing.

                    Stated below, I've tried to give you some context on what I want to achieve. I am very curious about your ideas and how you'd configure an optimal stack.

                    Project context (very high level):

                    • Loyalty program for local merchants (stores, restaurants,...).

                    • Customers support their community and merchants by shopping local.

                    • Merchants grant points to customers based on a customer's value spent in a store, restaurant, etc.

                    • Customers can redeem their points at any participating merchant.

                    Billing / Subscription scenarios to be considered:

                    (affecting merchants only)

                    One-time setup fee

                    • What: Merchant pays a setup fee by signing up for the service

                    • Where: Order placed on the website

                    Monthly retainer fee

                    • What: Merchant pays a monthly recurring retainer for the service.

                    • Where: Order placed on the website

                    Manually initiated payment

                    • What: Merchant initiates a payment to top up his virtual points wallet. E.g. pays 100 USD to top up 100000 points which then can be used by the merchant for granting points to customers.

                    • Why: Points issued to members need to be paid for by the merchant. We first considered billing the merchants post-ante, e.g. monthly based on the points they've granted to their customers in the last 30 days, but this seems too risky: If they can't / won't pay we'd still have to pay out points to the customers (technically to the merchants where the customers redeem their points). Thus, the pragmatic idea to reduce risk by having the merchants to pre-pay for their points by topping up their balance.

                    • Where: Web application (with the merchant logged in)

                    • Nice to have: Opt-in for automatically initiated top-ups if a merchant's balance falls below a certain amount.

                    Invoicing

                    • What: After every transaction (setup, retainer, top-up,...), we need to automatically issue and send (E-Mail) an invoice to the merchant.

                    • Nice to have: Customer portal with all their invoices.

                    Other potentially relevant parameters

                    • Currency: Only Euro

                    • Country: Only Germany (so far)

                    • Tax: Only one tax rate

                    • Payment for setup & retainer: Credit Card; ideally SEPA Direct Debit (but that still causes headache due to the SEPA regulatory and risk of chargebacks still after weeks), PayPal?

                    • Payment for top-up: Same as above plus any other that makes sense (Klarna, Sofort, PayPal...)

                    Again, thank you very much for sharing your ideas and thoughts! I'd highly appreciate any input :-)

                    See more
                    Vincenzo Belpiede
                    CEO at StellarTalents.com · | 7 upvotes · 118.1K views
                    Shared insights
                    on
                    ChargebeeChargebeePaddlePaddleStripeStripe

                    Stripe or Paddle for payment processing for SaaS?

                    we used Stripe + Chargebee once and will NEVER use them again (they charge too much (300usd/month while offering way fewer integrations than Stripe)

                    Furthermore, Chargebee doesn't support managing disputes. We still need to go to stripe for that.

                    Looking forward to hearing your thoughts

                    See more