Own Stripe vs Merchant of Record: The Fee Math Over Time
A merchant of record — Gumroad, Paddle, Lemon Squeezy — takes a percentage of every sale, forever, and in exchange handles global sales tax and becomes the legal seller. Selling on your own Stripe with gocushy flips the shape of the bill: money lands in your own Stripe balance minus only Stripe's standard processing fee, and gocushy's platform cut is 0% for life on the founding deal. Neither is a scam — the merchant-of-record cut buys genuine compliance work. But a percentage of every sale scales its cost with your revenue, while a fixed tool cost stays flat. This is the money math, not the ownership argument.
There are two honest ways to look at the own-Stripe-versus-merchant-of-record decision. One is about who owns the customer — whose entity the buyer's card and subscription live inside — and we've written that one already: merchant of record vs your own Stripe. This post is about the more boring number that compounds quietly over a few years: the fee. Two checkout models charge you in structurally different ways, and once you sketch the math, the difference is hard to unsee.
Two ways to pay for a checkout
Strip away the branding and there are really only two pricing shapes on offer.
Model A — a cut of every sale. A merchant of record (MoR) bundles payment processing, tax compliance, and platform services into one per-transaction rate. You never see a monthly bill; the cost is skimmed off each sale as it happens. In return, the platform is the legal seller and takes the global sales-tax burden off your plate entirely.
Model B — pay for the tool, keep your processing rate. You run checkout on your own Stripe account. The card cost is just Stripe's standard processing fee, landing straight in your balance, and the software sitting on top charges you a fixed or one-time amount instead of a slice of revenue. That's the model gocushy runs — via Stripe Connect direct charges, we never hold your funds and are never the merchant of record.
Model A, fairly: what the cut buys
Let's be accurate about the competitors, because the MoR model is a genuinely good fit for some sellers. Gumroad takes about 10% + 50¢ per sale and is about as easy as selling gets — you can be live in an afternoon. Paddle and Lemon Squeezy are merchant-of-record platforms taking roughly 5% + 50¢ per transaction, and for that they register for, collect, and remit sales tax and VAT across jurisdictions on your behalf, and become the seller of record — carrying the tax liability and owning the payment relationship.
That convenience is real, and for someone who never wants to think about VAT registration it can be worth every cent. The trade you're accepting is a permanent percentage of every sale, plus giving up the direct Stripe relationship. It's a trade, not a ripoff — but it is a trade you keep paying.
Model B: pay once, keep the rate
On your own Stripe, the platform layer stops being a percentage. gocushy's founding offer is $195 one-time for lifetime access with 0% gocushy platform fees for life — you still pay Stripe's standard processing rate, but nothing extra is skimmed on top by the platform. The software cost is fixed; it doesn't grow when your revenue does.
The reflex objection is "but then I have to deal with tax." Not exactly — see below.
Side by side
| Merchant of record (Gumroad, Paddle, Lemon Squeezy) | Own Stripe + gocushy | |
|---|---|---|
| Platform fee | ~10% + 50¢ (Gumroad); ~5% + 50¢ (Paddle, Lemon Squeezy), skimmed per sale | 0% for life (founding) — you pay only Stripe's standard processing |
| Who's the merchant of record | Them | You |
| Who handles sales tax | Them — registration & remittance included | You, via Stripe Tax on your own registrations |
| Who owns the Stripe / customer relationship | Them | You |
| Cost as you scale | Rises with every sale — a percentage of revenue | Flat — a fixed tool cost, whatever your volume |
The part that compounds: a worked illustration
The numbers below are round, illustrative figures chosen to show the shape of each model — not a quote, a promise, or a claim about your results.
Say you sell a $50 product. On a 5% + 50¢ merchant of record, the platform's take is about $3 on that sale. On your own Stripe with gocushy's founding 0% platform fee, the platform's take is $0 — you pay only Stripe's standard processing on the $50, and nothing on top of it to gocushy.
Now let the volume grow, and watch the two shapes diverge:
| Sales per month (× $50) | MoR platform take (~$3/sale) | gocushy founding platform take |
|---|---|---|
| 100 sales — $5,000 | ~$300 / month | $0 / month |
| 1,000 sales — $50,000 | ~$3,000 / month | $0 / month |
| 5,000 sales — $250,000 | ~$15,000 / month | $0 / month |
Stripe's standard processing fee applies underneath both columns — that's the cost of moving a card either way, and it isn't the point here. The point is the layer above processing: the MoR column is a percentage, so it climbs in lockstep with your revenue, while the founding gocushy column stays flat no matter how big you get. A one-time $195 doesn't care whether you sell ten things or ten thousand.
"But they handle my tax" isn't exclusive
The strongest argument for a merchant of record is that tax simply vanishes. Worth being precise here: that isn't something only an MoR can do. gocushy includes Stripe Tax support and sequential compliant invoices, so you can switch on tax collection on your own Stripe for the jurisdictions you're registered in. What you take on is the registering and remitting itself, where you actually owe. For a fuller walkthrough of how that works in practice, see handling VAT & GST on your own Stripe. (General product information, not tax advice — confirm your obligations with an accountant.)
Fee drift: the risk hiding in a percentage
There's a second, quieter reason the MoR bill grows. A percentage isn't only tied to your revenue — it's tied to the platform's pricing decisions, and those can move. Gumroad, for instance, has raised its fees over time, which is part of what has pushed some sellers toward lower-fee alternatives. When your cost is a slice of every sale, a rate change lands on all of your future revenue at once. A fixed or one-time tool cost has no such lever to pull on you.
When a merchant of record is the right call
Honesty cuts both ways. If you want zero tax admin, you're selling into many countries from day one, and you're happy to accept a cut of every sale as the price of never thinking about VAT again — a merchant of record is the right choice, and I'd point you at one without hesitation. The fee buys real work, and for that seller it's money well spent.
But if you expect to grow, and you'd rather the checkout layer cost the same at $250k/month as it did at $5k, the percentage model is the expensive shape over time. That's the case own-Stripe answers — and it's the one gocushy is built for.
0% for life, before the seats are gone.
The founding offer opens Friday, July 24, 2026: $195 one-time for lifetime access and 0% gocushy platform fees for life — you pay only Stripe's standard processing, on your own Stripe, forever. Limited to 200 seats. Optional Worldwide Tax & Affiliates Pack, +$95.
See the founding offerAfter founding: Free ($0 + 3% platform fee) or Pro ($79/mo + 0.5%). Stripe's processing fees always apply.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a merchant of record cost versus selling on your own Stripe?
Merchant-of-record platforms bundle a percentage into every sale. Gumroad takes roughly 10% + 50¢ per sale; Paddle and Lemon Squeezy take roughly 5% + 50¢ per transaction, and in exchange they handle global sales-tax and VAT compliance and become the seller of record. On your own Stripe you pay only Stripe's standard processing fee, and gocushy's platform cut is 0% for life on the founding deal — so the platform layer is a fixed cost rather than a slice of every sale.
Do I lose tax handling if I leave a merchant of record?
Not necessarily. "They handle my tax" is not exclusive to merchant-of-record platforms. gocushy includes Stripe Tax support and sequential compliant invoices, so you can switch on tax collection on your own Stripe for the registrations you hold. You do take on registering and remitting where you actually owe — this is general product information, not tax advice, so confirm your obligations with an accountant.
Isn't a merchant of record just a ripoff?
No. The cut buys real compliance work — the platform registers for, collects, and remits sales tax, VAT, and GST across jurisdictions, and carries the tax liability as the legal seller. For sellers who want zero tax admin and will accept the trade, that is genuinely worth it. The honest point is only that the cost is a permanent percentage of every sale, so it scales with your revenue where a fixed tool cost does not.
Why do merchant-of-record fees feel like they grow over time?
Two reasons. First, the fee is a percentage of every sale, so the dollar amount rises in lockstep with your revenue even if the rate never changes. Second, the rate itself can move: Gumroad, for example, has raised fees over time, which has pushed some sellers toward lower-fee alternatives. A one-time or low fixed tool cost does not drift with either your revenue or the platform's pricing decisions.
What does gocushy cost?
The founding offer opens Friday, July 24, 2026: $195 one-time for lifetime access and 0% gocushy platform fees for life, limited to 200 seats, with an optional Worldwide Tax & Affiliates Pack for +$95. After the founding window it's Free ($0 plus a 3% platform fee) or Pro ($79/mo plus 0.5%). Because payments run on your own Stripe, Stripe's standard processing fee always applies and gocushy never holds your funds.