Businesses today expect payments to work as smoothly as the platform they use every day. In B2B, that expectation is driving growing interest in embedded payments, where payment acceptance and financing live directly within existing business systems.
This article explains how embedded payments work in a business-to-business environment and what finance teams should consider when evaluating embedded finance solutions.
Embedded payments pull the entire payment process into the same platform where a transaction begins. Buyers can browse products, place orders, get approvals, and complete payment, all in the same environment. There's no separate portal or extra steps after checkout, as payments are simply part of the natural flow of completing the deal.
In B2B, payment usually comes after approvals and invoices, and that gap between “order placed” and “payment handled” is where 80% of organizations experience risk errors.
Here’s what changes when B2B payments move from legacy into embedded payment systems:
The embedded finance market is expected to grow from $66 billion in 2023 to $230 billion by 2030. That growth reflects how many businesses now want the seamless checkout experience they get in consumer purchases.
Embedded payment volumes are climbing because non-financial tools like procurement, marketplace, and e-commerce platforms are becoming the primary point of sale for B2B transactions.
Fintech companies and fintech infrastructure providers have figured out how to turn everyday platforms into embedded experiences.
Here's what's pushing embedded financial services forward:
Picture a wholesale distributor who closes a $50,000 order. Great news, except now finance teams have to send invoices, wait for the buyer's accounts payable department to process payment, and follow up when it's late.
Embedded payments change that dynamic by making payment part of the sale itself. Here's how they benefit B2B merchants:
From the buyer’s side, the biggest difference comes down to timing. Once you’re ready to place an order, payment shouldn’t slow things down or introduce unnecessary steps. Embedded B2B payments keep the process moving by aligning payment with the decision moment.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
Building embedded finance capabilities from scratch is a massive undertaking. You need to handle regulatory compliance, partner with a financial institution, build fraud detection systems, create APIs that work with existing systems, and maintain all of it while also running your business.
For most companies, partnering with a provider makes far more sense. Here's what matters when evaluating embedded payment partners:
Every time a new payment model gains traction, merchants have questions. That skepticism is good, and you should absolutely question any solution that promises to transform how you get paid without fully understanding the trade-offs.
Improving efficiency matters, but not if it means creating new problems or taking on risks you didn't sign up for. The good news is that most concerns about embedded B2B payments have practical answers. Let's walk you through the big ones:
Many businesses run on older ERP or accounting platforms. The right embedded payments provider should offer flexible integration options that layer on top of what's already there.
Embedded payments should support standard payment methods alongside BNPL or extended terms. The goal is to give buyers options, not force them into a specific preferred payment method.
Embedded finance platforms handle sensitive financial data, so they should meet industry standards for encryption and compliance. Look for providers that work with established financial institutions or fintech infrastructure providers to enhance security.
Credit Key is built specifically for business payments, with a focus on making embedded lending and B2B BNPL options easy to offer and use.
Merchants get paid within 48 hours, even when buyers choose extended terms.
Credit Key assumes the credit risk, handles collections, and provides the infrastructure to support Net 30, Pay-in-4, or terms up to 12 months, all embedded into the checkout flow.
The platform integrates with major e-commerce platforms and can also support in-store or phone and field sales scenarios. That means the same embedded treasury and payment experience works across channels.
For buyers, the experience is instant credit decisions (in most cases), transparent terms, and the ability to manage everything through a single account. For merchants, it’s about removing friction, increasing average order value, driving repeat purchases, and getting paid faster without taking on the risk.
Embedded payments bring B2B transactions closer to the simplicity businesses have come to expect from consumer experiences. For those looking to modernize payment acceptance and offer better terms to business clients, embedded B2B finance is worth considering.
Ready to see how embedded payments can work for your business? Request a demo to explore what Credit Key can do for your sales and cash flow.