What is the Difference in Token Formats?
Payment token formats differ based on how they’re created, who controls them, and how they can be used.
PSP tokens are issued by a single payment service provider and are limited to that provider’s ecosystem—great for simplicity, but not portable.
Universal tokens are provider-agnostic, offering flexibility across multiple PSPs, channels, and acquirers—ideal for scalable, multi-regional businesses.
Network tokens, provisioned by card networks like Visa or Mastercard, are trusted by issuers, enable life cycle management, and deliver higher approval rates and lower fraud—especially for card-on-file and subscription models.
PSP Token |
Universal Token |
Network Token |
|
---|---|---|---|
Issuer |
PSPs |
Third-party tokenization and payment orchestration providers |
PSPs, direct from payment networks, tokenization providers, and payment orchestration providers |
Benefits |
Quick to implement Security and token vault responsibilities are offloaded to the PSP Reduced PCI scope |
Reduced PCI scope, ideal for multi-provider setups, add or switch providers without re-tokenizing card data, easily expand into new regions |
Reduced PCI scope, ideal for multi-provider setups Increased authorization rates, greater security/reduced fraud, full life cycle management, shifts chargeback liability to the issuing bank |
Limitations |
Low flexibility limits business growth and portability |
Requires initial integration effort with the help of a provider |
Not yet at 100% adoption—meaning not all cards can be tokenized |
Users |
Small to medium-sized businesses or merchants that only use one PSP |
Global retailers; any platform, marketplace, or merchant seeking flexibility and scalability |
Subscription services, streaming platforms, and other card-on-file business models |
The Power of Payment Tokenization
It is estimated around two-thirds of merchants now using some form of tokenization to strengthen payment security and maximize authorizations. Tokenization is critical for preventing fraud, maintaining PCI compliance, and streamlining the customer experience. It also enables seamless recurring payments and cross-platform transactions without exposing raw financial data.
In terms of market growth, the adoption of tokenization is accelerating rapidly. According to P&S Intelligence, the global tokenization market is projected to grow at a CAGR of over 20% through 2030.
Types of Payment Tokens
But what exactly are payment tokens themselves? In the ecommerce landscape, payment tokens are digital stand-ins that replace sensitive payment details with randomly generated values. There are three primary token types, including PSP tokens, universal tokens, and network tokens. When weighing the best solution (or solutions!) for you and your business, it’s important to keep in mind certain use cases.
Payment Service Provider (PSP) Tokens
PSP tokens (sometimes called PCI or gateway tokens) are issued and stored by a single payment service provider (e.g., Adyen, Stripe). They are confined to that provider’s ecosystem.
For merchants, the benefits of PSP tokens include easy implementation and management, making them ideal for small businesses or those with straightforward payment setups with a single processor. These tokens also offload security and token vault responsibilities to the PSP, saving time and compliance costs.
However, a key limitation is vendor lock-in: these tokens aren’t portable if the merchant switches providers, which also means they can’t be used for payment routing across different acquirers or regions. As a result, PSP tokens are best suited for merchants just starting out or those relying exclusively on a single PSP for their payment processing.
Universal Tokens
Universal tokens are provider-agnostic tokens that can be used across different PSPs, gateways, channels, and even acquirers. Merchants maintain control of token lifecycle and mapping.
Some solutions like IXOPAY’s universal tokens empower merchants to tokenize payment data once and then seamlessly use those tokens across any provider or payment channel. By supporting central token vaulting, IXOPAY decouples tokenization from payment processing, enhancing flexibility while reducing PCI DSS scope by up to 90%.
For merchants, universal tokens enable multi-PSP routing strategies without the re-tokenizing of data. They allow full control over payment data and orchestration logic, and they simplify provider switching or regional expansion. Ideal for global retailers, platforms, and marketplaces seeking flexibility and scalability, universal tokens are best for merchants who want to minimize provider lock-in and maximize data control.
Network Tokens
Unlike PSP or universal tokens, card networks provision network tokens (e.g., Visa, Mastercard). Due to their cited benefits and performance stats, they are rapidly growing in popularity. Network tokens replace Primary Account Numbers (PANs) with an unrelated string of numbers associated with the card account, with their entire lifecycle managed by the issuing network. Network tokens are also merchant-specific and have limited points of de-tokenization compared to other token formats.
While network tokens are available from PSPs and other providers, their capabilities can vary based on how they are provisioned. This provisioning determines if a network token is portable or non portable. When it comes to realizing the full range of benefits associated with network tokens, several key nuances must be understood.
With IXOPAY’s network tokens, merchants can directly access network token services—independent of their PSPs—while gaining lifecycle management and dynamic provisioning via network rails. This approach prevents provider lock-in while delivering measurable performance benefits, including 3–6% higher approval rates (thanks to issuer-trusted tokens) and up to 28% lower fraud rates, especially for recurring payments. Additionally, automatic updates for expired or replaced cards significantly reduce customer churn.
Ideal for subscription services, streaming platforms, and any card-on-file business model, network tokens are a strategic tool for scaling businesses and enterprises that prioritize payment success rates and long-term customer retention.
Choosing the Right Tokenization Strategy
Merchants should align their tokenization strategy with their business model, scale, and flexibility requirements. Remember that:
PSP tokens offer simplicity but limit growth and portability.
Universal tokens (like IXOPAY’s) deliver acquirer-agnostic control for more agile operations.
Network tokens boost approval rates and security—especially for recurring or card-on-file use cases.
Pro tip: For future-proofing and maximum flexibility, many merchants employ a strategy that combines both universal tokens and network tokens. Using these two technologies together offers extensive benefits, from increased redundancy and reliability to strengthened security and reduced PCI scope. By using universal tokens alongside network tokens, merchants can have the best of both worlds.
Ready to dive even deeper? Download our whitepaper, “Network Tokens: Enhancing Merchant Payment Strategies” today.