Visa targets European payment processing infrastructure modernisation with new tool

Financial services giant Visa has launched a new tool to help European financial institutions modernise their payment acquisition and processing infrastructure.

Using Visa Intelligent Authorisation, financial firms responsible for processing payments on behalf of acquirers can streamline the way they authorise a constant barrage of payment acquisition requests without having to build the required infrastructure from scratch.

The solution is part of the Visa Acceptance Platform, a cloud-based suite of payment solutions designed specifically for acquiring banks. Because the feature requires only one application protocol integration, banks can get it up and running with relative ease and speed. According to Visa, the tool also supports major card networks and can be used as a standalone product or as part of acquirers’ existing payment processing systems.

At the heart of the tool is a machine learning engine designed for real-time analysis of incoming financial transactions. Visa says this information can help banks more effectively route payments while taking into account factors such as network rules, industry programmes and local regulatory frameworks.

Visa claims that financial institutions using the tool can view payment authorisation outcomes almost immediately, with potential risks also flagged straight away. Users can access relevant data via an analytics dashboard, which can feed into their own oversight, settlement and regulatory activities.

The company is positioning the tool as a response to the growing volume of authorisation requests that payment acquirers are currently facing. It attributes this to the rising adoption of modern payment methods such as digital wallets, stablecoins and agentic commerce – the use of AI agents to make purchases on behalf of customers.

As many banks still rely on legacy systems for processing payments, Visa argues that they often lack the means to process newer payment types or interpret the data that underpins them. This, it says, is contributing to issues such as false declines, higher costs and constraints on innovation. By contrast, Visa says its modern alternative is achieving 99.999 per cent uptime, while payments are approved 96.3 per cent of the time.

The European launch of Visa Intelligent Authorisation is being supported by Comercia Global Payments, Elavon, Fiserv, UNICRE and Worldline.

Dan Parsons, head of acceptance sales at Visa Europe, said: “Commerce is moving faster than ever – across channels, markets and payment types – but too many transactions are still flowing through acquiring stacks built for a very different pace.

“When systems can’t keep up, the result is higher decline rates, increased costs and missed sales for merchants. Visa Intelligent Authorisation will help change that. It gives acquirers a fast path to modern, resilient processing, helping them build for what is happening now, and what is coming next.”



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