From debit cards to ATMs to wire transfers, it’s now widely accepted that electronic transfers are a secure and efficient way to send funds, but the various types of transfers available can make it difficult to decipher which is the best method for your business. For example, what’s the difference between an electronic funds transfer (EFT) and an Automated Clearing House (ACH) payment? And when is one better to use than the other?
We’ll cover the differences and overlaps between EFTs and ACH payments, what each type is used for, and what you should know about electronic payment methods for your business.
What's in this article?
- What is an EFT?
- What is an ACH payment?
- ACH vs EFT: What’s the difference?
What is an EFT?
What is an EFT?
EFTs are transactions that move funds electronically between different financial institutions, bank accounts or individuals. EFTs are commonly referred to as electronic bank transfers, e-checks and electronic payments.
Types of EFT:
- ACH transfers
- Wire transfers
- ATM transactions (withdrawals, deposits and transfers)
- Debit card transactions
- Peer-to-peer payments
What is an ACH payment?
ACH payments are electronic transfers of funds sent using the Automated Clearing House, a centralised US financial network for banks and credit unions used for sending and receiving electronic payments and money transfers. The ACH network is operated and governed by the National Automated Clearing House Association (Nacha), an independent organisation of banks, credit unions and payment processing companies.
ACH payments are a highly flexible way to send and receive funds for a wide range of uses. In 2021, more than 426 million payments totalling US$2 trillion were made using the ACH network, an increase of almost 18% from 2020.
Types of ACH payments:
ACH direct deposit
Referring to any kind of transfer from a government entity or business to a consumer, an ACH direct deposit allows employers to transfer payroll funds directly into their employees’ bank accounts. According to Nacha, 93% of US workers receive their pay cheques via ACH direct deposit.
Other types of direct deposit:
- Employer-reimbursed expenses
- Government benefits
- Tax refunds
- Annuity payments
- Interest payments
ACH direct payments
Direct payments allow consumers and businesses to issue payments straight from their bank accounts. These payments can be used for anything from paying bills to buying goods and services.
ACH vs EFT: What’s the difference?
The terms "ACH transfers" and "EFT" are not interchangeable, but they are strongly related. ACH transfers are a type of EFT, and EFTs include ACH transfers but are not limited to them.
There are additional differences between ACH payments and other types of EFTs:
How they’re processed
While wire transfers are processed individually in real time, ACH transfers are settled in batches. Every transfer request that comes into the ACH network joins a queue – several times during business days, the transfers in this queue are processed together.Transfer speed
Some EFTs, such as digital wallets, ATM transactions and debit card payments, are authorised and completed within a few seconds. Wire transfers typically take anywhere from a few hours up to two working days. ACH payments are generally considered to take longer than wire transfers, but updates to Nacha’s operating rules in the past few years have greatly expanded access to same-day ACH transfers.Cost
EFT costs and fees vary considerably, depending on the type of EFT, where the transfer is originating from, where the transfer is heading and the amount of money involved. ATM transactions and payments sent using peer-to-peer apps usually carry per-transaction fees of just a few dollars, whereas international wire transfers can cost as much as US$50 per transfer. Some ACH transfers are free, and some cost a few dollars.
The differences between types of EFTs speak to the expansive range of products and services that falls under this umbrella term. Understanding the various options available for transferring funds will help you make smart, practical decisions about which type of EFT is the ideal vehicle for your payment needs.
|
ACH Payments |
Other EFTs (wires, debit, ATM, digital wallets) |
|
|---|---|---|
|
Processing method |
Batch processing: transactions queue and settle in groups several times per business day |
Varies: wire transfers processed individually in real time; card, ATM, and wallet transactions often authorized instantly |
|
Speed |
Typically 1–3 business days, with same-day ACH availability increasing |
Instant (cards, ATMs, wallets), to same-day (some wires), or multiday (international wires) |
|
Cost |
Often free or low-cost |
Varies from low-cost (ATM, P2P apps) to high-cost (international wires) |
|
Best for |
Schedule payments, payroll, recurring transfers, bank-to-bank transfers |
Time-sensitive payments (wires), everyday spending (cards/ATMs), digital wallet transactions |
The differences between types of EFTs speak to the expansive range of products and services that falls under this umbrella term. Understanding the various options available for transferring funds will help you make smart, practical decisions about which type of EFT is the ideal vehicle for your payment needs.
ACH vs EFT: Deciding what’s best for your business
Selecting the right method depends on your business’s specific needs for speed, cost, and security. While all ACH payments are EFTs, not all EFTs are ACH. For certain kinds of payments, an EFT besides ACH might be the best bet.
High-volume, domestic transfers: If you process a lot of recurring domestic payments like employee payroll or monthly subscriptions, then ACH might be the best choice. Because these are processed in batches, the cost per transaction is significantly lower than other electronic methods.
Cross-border commerce: If you need to move money across borders, and especially large sums of money, then EFTs like wire transfers are the global standard. While ACH is primarily a domestic network, wire transfers use the SWIFT network to reach international banks quickly and securely.
Real-time retail payments: If you operate a storefront or ecommerce site where customers expect to leave with a product immediately, then EFTs like debit card transactions are the best choice. Unlike ACH, which can take days to clear, debit transactions provide an instant “approved” or “declined” status at the point of sale.
Urgent, high-value transactions: If you are closing a real estate deal or making a major vendor payment that must be finalized today, a wire transfer is the preferred EFT. ACH payments can be reversed in some instances and take longer to settle, whereas wire transfers are generally considered cleared funds as soon as they hit the recipient's account.
Flexible person-to-person payments: If your business model involves quick reimbursements or gig-style payouts to individuals, peer-to-peer (P2P) EFTs are often more convenient than ACH since they typically bypass the need to provide sensitive bank information.
FAQs about ACH payments and EFT transfers
How Stripe Payments can help
Stripe Payments enables businesses to set up and accept 125+ payment methods, including ACH Direct Debit. It provides a unified, global payments solution that helps any business—from scaling startups to global enterprises—accept payments online, in person, and around the world.
Stripe Payments can help you:
Simplify verification: Instantly verify ACH Direct Debits or send microdeposits to verify customers’ bank account details within 2 business days.
Simplify refunds: Make refunds or return excess funds to the customer.
Optimize your checkout experience: Create a frictionless customer experience and save thousands of engineering hours with prebuilt payment UIs and Link, Stripe’s digital wallet.
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Learn more about how Stripe Payments can power your online and in-person payments, or get started today.
The content in this article is for general information and education purposes only and should not be construed as legal or tax advice. Stripe does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, adequacy, or currency of the information in the article. You should seek the advice of a competent lawyer or accountant licensed to practise in your jurisdiction for advice on your particular situation.