Small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are growing, yet many credit unions are leaving value on the table by not offering merchant services or business credit cards as part of their business banking ecosystem. For SMBs, payments are not a back-office function but a daily operational driver that affects cash flow, efficiency, and customer experience. Increasingly, those payment capabilities shape how business owners evaluate their primary financial institution.
Despite strong growth across the SMB segment, operational pressures remain high. Business owners manage fluctuating receivables, payroll timing, vendor payments, and rising costs — often simultaneously. Payment acceptance and expense tools are central to navigating those challenges. Merchant processing and business credit cards help smooth cash flow, extend payment windows, and give owners flexibility when inflows and outflows are misaligned.
Yet nearly 40% of SMBs still don’t use a business credit card, even though nearly half say they would pay for one offering digital tools and control over payment timing. That gap represents both unmet needs and untapped opportunity for credit unions.
Merchant services also play a larger strategic role. Payment processing is one of the most consistent touchpoints between an institution and its business members, generating recurring fee income while providing visibility into sales trends, revenue timing, and seasonal patterns. When those transactions move to third-party processors, credit unions lose not only revenue, but insight that could support more informed lending, treasury, and advisory conversations.
Community financial institutions already hold an advantage with SMBs. Seventy-six percent of small business borrowers report satisfaction with credit unions over large banks or online lenders thanks to relationship-based service and local expertise. However, that advantage can erode when merchant capabilities fail to match modern expectations. Ease of use, reliability, and integration with accounting and point-of-sale systems are now baseline requirements, not differentiators.
Technology expectations are accelerating. The vast majority of SMBs accepting in-person payments plan to upgrade their payment technology in the next year, and digital wallets and software-based platforms have become standard. Business owners want payment systems that reduce manual work, integrate with their existing tools, and support multiple payment methods without added complexity.
For credit unions, offering merchant services and business credit cards is no longer just about expanding product menus. It is about staying embedded in how members run their businesses. When payments, credit, and core banking work together, credit unions can protect long-term relationships, generate sustainable revenue, and remain the trusted financial partner SMBs rely on as they grow.
