What Is the Difference Between a Merchant Account and a Business Account?
Updated April 2025
When setting up your company, opening the right type of financial accounts is one of the most important steps. From handling customer payments to managing operational expenses, understanding the difference between a merchant account and a business account can help you avoid confusion—and build a solid foundation for growth.
These accounts serve very different purposes. In fact, if your business accepts online card payments, you’ll likely need both.
Let’s break down what each account is, what it does, and how they work together.
What Is a Business Account?
A business account is your company's primary financial account. It’s where you hold and manage funds, receive payments from customers, pay suppliers, and handle payroll or tax obligations.
Business accounts can be offered by both traditional banks and modern fintech providers and the features can vary significantly depending on the provider.
Two Common Types of Business Accounts:
1. Traditional Business Accounts (Typically Offered by Banks)
- Provide debit cards, cheques, and overdraft options
- Often limited to a single currency
- May involve higher fees and slower onboarding
- Ideal for companies needing physical banking services or in-person transactions
2. Digital or Fintech Business Accounts (Focused on Payments)
- Usually multi-currency, allowing you to hold and transact in 30+ currencies
- Access to local and international payment rails (e.g. SEPA, SWIFT, Faster Payments)
- No physical branches, fast online onboarding
- Typically don’t offer loans or overdraft facilities
- Perfect for online businesses, exporters/importers, and remote teams
CatalystPay’s business accounts fall into this second category—multi-currency, digital-first, and designed for international payments and growth.
What Is a Merchant Account?
A merchant account is a specialised account that enables your business to accept credit and debit card payments, usually through an online checkout, POS system, or virtual terminal.
Here’s how it works:
- When a customer pays by card, the transaction is processed through your payment gateway
- Funds are first deposited into your merchant account, where they are held temporarily
- After the transaction is approved and settled, the funds are released, typically within a few days, to your business account
You don’t have direct access to the money in your merchant account. It acts as a holding account controlled by your payment service provider (also known as the acquirer), who ensures the transaction is verified, compliant, and funds are cleared.
Merchant Accounts vs Business Accounts
What are the main differences between merchant accounts and other types of business accounts? Merchant accounts are required for any company that wants to run an online presence and must be used in conjunction with a commercial bank account. The bank will charge routine fees for usage, much like regular commercial bank accounts.
The most significant difference is that merchant accounts do not give you direct control over the money in them. You will not be able to move, withdraw, or deposit any money into or out of your merchant account.
If you're not sure whether to get a merchant account, consider how you want to conduct your business. A merchant account is not necessary for those who prefer to do their business entirely offline. However, by doing so, you may be missing out on sales these days, since more and more people are buying online.
Key Differences at a Glance
|
Feature |
Business Account |
Merchant Account |
|
Purpose |
Manage company finances, send/receive payments |
Accept and process card payments |
|
Funds Control |
Full access and control over funds |
No direct access—funds are temporarily held |
|
Currency Support |
Varies: Single currency or multi-currency (fintechs) |
Depends on acquirer setup |
|
Use Case |
Payroll, expenses, vendor payments, receiving funds |
Accepting card payments from customers |
|
Provider |
Banks or fintechs |
Acquiring banks or PSPs |
|
Access to Cards |
Often includes debit cards |
Does not issue cards or support cash withdrawals |
Why You Likely Need Both
If your business accepts card payments (especially online), you’ll need a merchant account to process those transactions and a business account to receive the funds once they settle.
In short:
- The merchant account handles the transaction
- The business account receives and manages the money
They work together to enable seamless commerce, both online and offline.
How CatalystPay Helps
At CatalystPay, we provide both:
- Merchant Accounts: Accept online card payments securely and reliably with access to 30+ acquirers
- Multi-Currency Business Accounts: Hold, send, and receive over 30 currencies from one platform, with access to SEPA, SWIFT, and Faster Payments
Whether you're starting up or scaling internationally, we help you simplify payments, reduce costs, and expand with confidence.
Contact us to learn more or open your account today.