{"title":"Defining your account structure","category":"default","creationDate":1776961629,"content":"<div class=\"additional-info-block output-inline\">\n<h5 class=\"article__heading additional-info-block__title\">See an example<\/h5><div class=\"additional-info-block__body\"><p>For an example of how a growing business adjusts its account structure, refer to <a href=\"\/pt\/account\/define-account-structure\/example\">Example account structures<\/a>.<\/p><\/div><\/div>\n\n<p>On this page, you'll learn about the most important factors to consider when defining your account structure.<\/p>\n<p>When defining your account structure, there are trade-offs to consider.\u00a0Having fewer merchant\u00a0accounts\u00a0simplifies your operations and minimizes the number of reports you need for reconciliation. But\u00a0having more merchant accounts allows for increased granularity in reporting, user permissions, and how you get paid.<\/p>\n<p>In general, we recommend that you have as few merchant accounts as possible, as long as you have enough to accommodate your business needs.<\/p>\n<p>If you need more help defining your account structure, contact our\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/ca-test.adyen.com\/ca\/ca\/contactUs\/support.shtml?form=other\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener noreferrer\" class=\"external-link no-image\">Support Team<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h2>Legal entities<\/h2>\n<p>You need at least one merchant account for each legal entity that you process payments with.\u00a0You cannot link a single merchant account to two legal entities, for example one in the US and another one in France.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>However, one legal entity can have multiple merchant accounts. For example, a legal entity in the US can have multiple US merchant accounts, for ecommerce or in-person payments.\u00a0<\/p>\n<h3>Invoicing<\/h3>\n<p>By default, you receive your <a href=\"\/pt\/reporting\/invoice-reconciliation\/payment-processing-invoice\">monthly invoice<\/a> at the company account level. You will get separate invoices for each merchant account that is under a different legal entity than the company account.<\/p>\n<h3>Acquiring<\/h3>\n<p>Our merchants often open legal entities with us in regions where we offer local acquiring.\u00a0 This may provide several benefits such as reduced interchange and scheme fees, increased authorisation rates, as well as faster settlement.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Your acquiring connections are configured at the merchant account level, and a\u00a0single merchant account can be associated with only one acquiring region. For more information, refer to\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.adyen.com\/global-payment-processing\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener noreferrer\" class=\"external-link no-image\">Global payment processing<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h2>Getting paid<\/h2>\n<p>Adyen pays out to you at the merchant account level. The more merchant accounts you have, the more payout batches you will receive.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Your merchant account must be associated with the legal entity that owns the bank account to which funds will ultimately be settled. If you are accepting payments in multiple currencies, you may link multiple bank accounts to a single merchant account.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Although you may have multiple bank accounts linked to your merchant account, you may only have one bank account per settlement currency. If you want to split funds from different countries\/regions in the same currency, you need to create multiple merchant accounts.<\/p>\n<h2>Reporting<\/h2>\n<p>The reports used for reconciling bank settlements are generated at the merchant account level.\u00a0You can choose to configure merchant accounts by individual business lines or geography, based on how you want to receive this information.<\/p>\n<p>Having\u00a0fewer merchant accounts\u00a0reduces the amount of reports required for financial reconciliation, which is especially important to consider if you reconcile manually.<\/p>\n<h2>Risk management<\/h2>\n<p>Risk rules\u00a0for <a href=\"\/pt\/risk-management\/configure-standard-risk-rules\">RevenueProtect<\/a>\u00a0and\u00a0<a href=\"\/pt\/risk-management\/dynamic-3d-secure\">Dynamic 3D Secure<\/a> are configured at the company account level, with the option to overrule settings at the merchant account level.<\/p>\n<p>Risk rules at the merchant account level are useful if you want to establish a different risk profile based on business line or location.\u00a0For example, physical goods and digital goods can have different risk factors, and risk considerations for transactions originating in the US can differ from those originating in the EU.\u00a0<\/p>\n<h2>User permissions<\/h2>\n<p>Users with access to the company account have access to all merchant accounts under that company account. To limit <a href=\"\/pt\/account\/user-roles\">user permissions<\/a>, you need to create separate merchant accounts.<\/p>\n<p>You can <a href=\"\/pt\/account\/users#create\">limit a user's permissions<\/a> to either specific merchant accounts, or to an <a href=\"\/pt\/account\/account-structure#account-groups\">account group<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h2>In-person payments<\/h2>\n<p>We recommend creating separate merchant accounts for ecommerce (online payments) and in-person payments (point of sale). Local legal entities are required for point-of-sale processing, so you need to create a separate merchant account for each region where you process POS payments.<\/p>\n<p>If you operate multiple physical stores in the same region, you can link these to one merchant account, using the <code>storeID<\/code> to identify the individual store location.<\/p>\n<p>Alternatively, you could create separate merchant accounts for different stores. This is required if you need to:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Receive separate payouts in the same currency or invoices for the different stores.<\/li>\n<li>Limit user credentials to a particular store.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>For more information, refer to <a href=\"\/pt\/point-of-sale\/design-your-integration\/determine-account-structure\">Set up your Adyen account for in-person payments<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h2>See also<\/h2>\n<div class=\"see-also-links output-inline\" id=\"see-also\">\n<ul><li><a href=\"\/account\/account-structure\"\n                        target=\"_self\"\n                        >\n                    Account structure\n                <\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"\/account\/define-account-structure\/example\"\n                        target=\"_self\"\n                        >\n                    Example account structures\n                <\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"\/account\/manage-account-structure\"\n                        target=\"_self\"\n                        >\n                    Manage your account structure\n                <\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"\/account\/define-account-structure\/framework-onboarding\"\n                        target=\"_self\"\n                        >\n                    Framework entity onboarding\n                <\/a><\/li><\/ul><\/div>\n","url":"https:\/\/docs.adyen.com\/pt\/account\/define-account-structure","articleFields":{"description":"Choose an account structure that works best for your business.","id":"24221097","type":"page","_expandable":{"operations":""},"status":"current","last_edit_on":"05-09-2019 12:13"},"algolia":{"url":"https:\/\/docs.adyen.com\/pt\/account\/define-account-structure","title":"Defining your account structure","content":"\nSee an exampleFor an example of how a growing business adjusts its account structure, refer to Example account structures.\n\nOn this page, you'll learn about the most important factors to consider when defining your account structure.\nWhen defining your account structure, there are trade-offs to consider.\u00a0Having fewer merchant\u00a0accounts\u00a0simplifies your operations and minimizes the number of reports you need for reconciliation. But\u00a0having more merchant accounts allows for increased granularity in reporting, user permissions, and how you get paid.\nIn general, we recommend that you have as few merchant accounts as possible, as long as you have enough to accommodate your business needs.\nIf you need more help defining your account structure, contact our\u00a0Support Team.\nLegal entities\nYou need at least one merchant account for each legal entity that you process payments with.\u00a0You cannot link a single merchant account to two legal entities, for example one in the US and another one in France.\u00a0\u00a0\nHowever, one legal entity can have multiple merchant accounts. For example, a legal entity in the US can have multiple US merchant accounts, for ecommerce or in-person payments.\u00a0\nInvoicing\nBy default, you receive your monthly invoice at the company account level. You will get separate invoices for each merchant account that is under a different legal entity than the company account.\nAcquiring\nOur merchants often open legal entities with us in regions where we offer local acquiring.\u00a0 This may provide several benefits such as reduced interchange and scheme fees, increased authorisation rates, as well as faster settlement.\u00a0\u00a0\nYour acquiring connections are configured at the merchant account level, and a\u00a0single merchant account can be associated with only one acquiring region. For more information, refer to\u00a0Global payment processing.\nGetting paid\nAdyen pays out to you at the merchant account level. The more merchant accounts you have, the more payout batches you will receive.\u00a0\nYour merchant account must be associated with the legal entity that owns the bank account to which funds will ultimately be settled. If you are accepting payments in multiple currencies, you may link multiple bank accounts to a single merchant account.\u00a0\u00a0\nAlthough you may have multiple bank accounts linked to your merchant account, you may only have one bank account per settlement currency. If you want to split funds from different countries\/regions in the same currency, you need to create multiple merchant accounts.\nReporting\nThe reports used for reconciling bank settlements are generated at the merchant account level.\u00a0You can choose to configure merchant accounts by individual business lines or geography, based on how you want to receive this information.\nHaving\u00a0fewer merchant accounts\u00a0reduces the amount of reports required for financial reconciliation, which is especially important to consider if you reconcile manually.\nRisk management\nRisk rules\u00a0for RevenueProtect\u00a0and\u00a0Dynamic 3D Secure are configured at the company account level, with the option to overrule settings at the merchant account level.\nRisk rules at the merchant account level are useful if you want to establish a different risk profile based on business line or location.\u00a0For example, physical goods and digital goods can have different risk factors, and risk considerations for transactions originating in the US can differ from those originating in the EU.\u00a0\nUser permissions\nUsers with access to the company account have access to all merchant accounts under that company account. To limit user permissions, you need to create separate merchant accounts.\nYou can limit a user's permissions to either specific merchant accounts, or to an account group.\nIn-person payments\nWe recommend creating separate merchant accounts for ecommerce (online payments) and in-person payments (point of sale). Local legal entities are required for point-of-sale processing, so you need to create a separate merchant account for each region where you process POS payments.\nIf you operate multiple physical stores in the same region, you can link these to one merchant account, using the storeID to identify the individual store location.\nAlternatively, you could create separate merchant accounts for different stores. This is required if you need to:\n\nReceive separate payouts in the same currency or invoices for the different stores.\nLimit user credentials to a particular store.\n\nFor more information, refer to Set up your Adyen account for in-person payments.\nSee also\n\n\n                    Account structure\n                \n                    Example account structures\n                \n                    Manage your account structure\n                \n                    Framework entity onboarding\n                \n","type":"page","locale":"pt","boost":18,"hierarchy":{"lvl0":"Home","lvl1":"Account","lvl2":"Defining your account structure"},"hierarchy_url":{"lvl0":"https:\/\/docs.adyen.com\/pt","lvl1":"https:\/\/docs.adyen.com\/pt\/account","lvl2":"\/pt\/account\/define-account-structure"},"levels":3,"category":"Account","category_color":"green","tags":["Defining","account","structure"]}}
