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Why Small Businesses Are Now Ditching Their Bank’s Card Machine

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May 26, 2026
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Why Small Businesses Are Now Ditching Their Bank’s Card Machine
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For years, the default move for a small business needing to take card payments was simple: go to your bank and rent a terminal. It seemed logical at the time.

Your bank already handled your business account, so why go elsewhere? The problem is that for a lot of SME owners, that decision has quietly cost them more than they ever expected.

Complaints about bank-issued card machines have been building up for a while. Slow settlements, locked-in contracts, clunky hardware and support teams that treat you like a ticket number. Carry on reading to find out what’s driving small businesses to make the switch and what they’re moving to instead.

What’s Wrong With Your Bank’s Terminal

The hardware issue alone is enough to put people off. Most bank-issued terminals are running on ageing technology, with slow boot times, limited connectivity options and interfaces that haven’t changed meaningfully in years. For a busy café or independent retailer, a terminal that takes 30 seconds to process a payment is frustrating, it also holds up the queue, and affects the customer experience.

Then there’s settlement speed. Some providers still operate on a T+3 basis as standard, with deferred settlement arrangements pushing that even further for certain merchants. That means money from card transactions may not reach your account for several business days, even though faster settlement is now available across much of the market.

For a small business managing tight cash flow, that kind of lag can cause real problems. It’s not unusual for an SME to take a significant Friday evening in sales and still be waiting for that money on Wednesday.

Contracts That Favour the Provider, Not the Business

One of the biggest frustrations among business owners is the contract structure. Bank payment solutions have often come with fixed-term agreements of up to 18 months, and early termination fees and auto-renewal clauses can still make switching feel difficult once you’re locked in.

Some business owners have reported paying monthly rental fees for terminals they barely use during quieter periods, with no flexibility to pause or reduce costs. When business is seasonal, a market trader in winter, for instance, or a pop-up that only operates at events, paying a flat monthly fee for hardware that’s sitting in a drawer makes very little sense.

A New Generation of Payment Terminals

The fintech sector has stepped into the gap left by legacy providers, and the options available to UK businesses have expanded considerably in recent years. These providers tend to offer faster settlement, transparent transaction fees, no monthly hardware rental costs, and much more intuitive devices.

Zeller is a fintech platform used by over 100,000 businesses internationally, offering UK merchants a modern approach to payments infrastructure.Their terminal range connects via Wi-Fi, 4G or Ethernet, supports split billing and custom VAT rates, and comes without lock-in contracts or subscription fees.

It also pairs with a business account and expense cards in a single setup, which reduces the need for multiple financial tools, the kind of integrated approach that appeals to businesses that have previously had to stitch together a payment provider, a current account and a separate expense management tool.

What to Look for When Switching

If you’re thinking about moving away from your bank’s terminal, a few things are worth checking before you commit to a new provider:

Settlement speed: Does the provider offer next-day or same-day payouts?
Contract terms:  Are there lock-in periods or early exit fees?
Transaction fees: Do you understand them at first glance? Or do you need to dig through fine print to find them?
Hardware costs: Is the terminal purchased outright, or rented monthly?
Support availability: Can you reach a real person quickly if something goes wrong?

Support: Where Legacy Providers Often Fall Short

Ask any small business owner what frustrates them most about their current payment provider, and support quality will come up more often than you’d expect. Legacy bank providers typically route queries through large call centres, and getting through to someone with the authority to actually resolve an issue can take hours. For a business mid-service, that’s not good enough.

Newer providers tend to invest more heavily in customer support, partly because their model depends on retention instead of locking people in through contracts. When your customers can leave more easily, you have a stronger incentive to make sure they don’t want to.

Concluding Remarks

The bank card machine made sense in a market where there weren’t many alternatives. That’s no longer the case. The combination of outdated hardware, slow settlement, inflexible contracts and poor support has pushed a growing number of SMEs to look elsewhere, and the fintech sector has responded with products built specifically around how small businesses actually operate.

If you’re still renting a terminal from your bank on a rolling contract, it’s worth doing a proper cost comparison. In many cases, switching to a newer provider will save money, speed up access to your funds and give you a better experience when things go wrong.

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Why Small Businesses Are Now Ditching Their Bank’s Card Machine

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