Card payments on the Charges APILegacy
Learn how to charge, save, and authenticate cards with Stripe's legacy APIs.
Legacy API
The content of this section refers to a Legacy feature. Use the Payment Intents API instead.
The Charges API doesn’t support the following features, many of which are required for credit card compliance:
- Merchants in India
- Bank requests for card authentication
- Strong Customer Authentication
The Charges and Tokens APIs are legacy APIs used in older Stripe integrations to accept debit and credit card payments. Use PaymentIntents for new integrations.
The Charges API limits your ability to take advantage of Stripe features. To get the latest features, use Stripe Checkout or migrate to the Payment Intents API.
Payment flow
In most cases, the PaymentIntents API offers more flexibility and integration options.
Charges API | Payment Intents API |
---|---|
|
|
Refunds
To refund a payment via the API, create a Refund and provide the ID of the charge to be refunded.
To refund part of a payment, provide an amount
parameter, as an integer in cents (or the charge currency’s smallest currency unit).
Apple Pay
When your customer approves the payment, your app receives a PKPayment instance containing their encrypted card details by implementing the PKPaymentAuthorizationViewControllerDelegate methods.
- Use the createTokenWithPayment SDK method to turn the
PKPayment
into a StripeToken
- Use this
Token
to create a charge.
Dynamic statement descriptor
By default, your Stripe account’s statement descriptor appears on customer statements whenever you charge their card. Additionally, you can set the statement descriptor dynamically on every charge request with the statement_
argument on the Charge object.
Statement descriptors are limited to 22 characters, can’t use the special characters <
, >
, '
, "
, or *
, and must not consist solely of numbers.
When setting the statement descriptor dynamically on credit and debit card charges, the dynamic portion is appended to the settlement merchant’s statement descriptor (separated by an *
and an empty space). For example, a statement descriptor for a business, named FreeCookies, that includes the kind of cookie purchased might look like FREECOOKIES* SUGAR
.
The *
and empty space count towards the 22 character limit and Stripe automatically allots 10 characters for the dynamic statement descriptor. This means that the settlement merchant’s descriptor might be truncated if it’s longer than 10 characters (assuming the dynamic statement descriptor is also greater than 10 characters). If the dynamic statement descriptor is also greater than 10 characters, both descriptors are truncated at 10 characters.
If you’re having issues with the character limits, you can set a shortened descriptor in the Stripe Dashboard to shorten the settlement merchant’s descriptor. This allows more room for the dynamic statement descriptor. The shortened descriptor:
- Replaces the settlement merchant’s statement descriptor when using dynamic descriptors.
- Can be between 2 and 10 characters.
Note
If your account’s statement descriptor is longer than 10 characters, set a shortened descriptor in the Dashboard or use statement_
. This prevents your statement descriptor from being truncated in unpredictable ways.
If you’re not sure what the statement descriptors look like when they’re combined, you can check them in the Stripe Dashboard.
Storing information in metadata
Stripe supports adding metadata to the most common requests you make, such as processing charges. Metadata isn’t shown to customers or factored into whether a charge is declined or blocked by our fraud prevention system.
Through metadata, you can associate other information—meaningful to you—with Stripe activity. Any metadata you include is viewable in the Dashboard (for example, when looking at the page for an individual charge), and is also available in common reports and exports. As an example, your store’s order ID can be attached to the charge used to pay for that order. Doing so allows you, your accountant, or your finance team to easily reconcile charges in Stripe to orders in your system.
If you are using Radar, consider passing any additional customer information and order information as metadata. By doing so, you can write Radar rules using metadata attributes and have more information about the payment available within the Dashboard which can expedite your review process.
Caution
Don’t store any sensitive information (personally identifiable information, card details, and so on) as metadata or in the charge’s description
parameter.
Declines
If you want your integration to respond to payment failures automatically, you can access a charge’s outcome
in two ways.
- Handle the API error that’s returned when a payment fails. For blocked and card issuer-declined payments, the error includes the charge’s ID, which you can then use to retrieve the charge.
- Use webhooks to monitor status updates. For example, the
charge.
event triggers when a payment is unsuccessful.failed