PaySafe
- Creator economy.
- Mass payouts and revenue share.
- Multi-currency creator wallets.
For the creator economy, PaySafe is built for the way money actually moves — mass payouts, revenue share splits and multi-currency creator wallets.
A side-by-side overview of pricing, coverage, features, and merchant fit.
For the creator economy, PaySafe is built for the way money actually moves — mass payouts, revenue share splits and multi-currency creator wallets.
For most businesses, Stripe is the clearest choice here — 184 supported currencies and 4 payment methods cover almost every use case.
PayAtlas compares payment providers across pricing, country coverage, supported payment methods, integration requirements, dispute handling, and operational features like sandboxes and webhooks. You can evaluate global processors like Stripe and PayPal, regional providers like AstroPay, or specialized players like TransferGalaxy inside a single consistent format.
Every comparison covers the same six dimensions: pricing and fees, country coverage, supported payment methods, integration and developer experience, operational capabilities such as disputes and webhooks, and use-case fit. Fixing the criteria means you can move between comparisons without learning a new format each time.
Each comparison uses structured provider data maintained by PayAtlas, cross-checked against public documentation, API references, and operational research. The data layer feeding comparisons is the same one behind Insights and country guides, so numbers stay consistent across the platform.
No. PayAtlas does not take payment from providers to rank them and does not declare absolute winners. Every comparison frames trade-offs so you can weigh them against your own geography, transaction mix, and business model.
Insights describe how the payment ecosystem behaves at a market or regional level, often through maps, charts, and benchmarks. Comparisons zoom in on specific providers and place them next to each other across a fixed set of dimensions. Use Insights to understand a market and Comparisons to choose a tool inside that market.
Yes. Every comparison surfaces the key pricing signals for each provider, including transaction fees, fixed per-transaction components, and notable cost gaps that affect specific payment methods or regions. Where exact percentages depend on volume or geography, PayAtlas flags the condition rather than picking a single number.
Comparisons start from public pricing and then note common additional costs that providers do not always surface upfront, such as currency conversion markups, chargeback fees, and premium support tiers. If a fee only appears under negotiation or at high volume, the comparison says so instead of treating it as standard.
Each comparison breaks out country and regional coverage so you can see where a provider is strong, where it is present but limited, and where it does not operate. If one provider covers 103 countries and another covers 45, the comparison makes that gap visible along with what it means for a business targeting specific markets.
PayAtlas reviews comparison data on a regular cadence and refreshes it whenever a provider changes pricing, expands coverage, or ships a material capability. Static elements like core company background update less often, while PayAtlas watches pricing and coverage more closely.
PayAtlas adds new comparisons once provider data clears validation and once user demand points to a clear pairing. Priority goes to pairings that appear most often in real decisions, such as global-versus-global matchups and global-versus-regional coverage questions.
Comparison data comes from provider integrations, public documentation, API references, operational research, and regulator and industry sources. All data passes through the same validation layer that powers Insights, which keeps numbers consistent across the platform.
Start with a pairing that matches a decision you are close to making, such as Stripe vs PayPal for global processing or a global-versus-regional pairing if you are entering a new market. From there, jump into the matching country guide or Insight to see how that choice plays out in the market you care about.