When a Dynamics 365 implementation slips, payment processing is rarely the first thing blamed, but it’s often one of the biggest hidden causes.
Across Business Central, SCM, Commerce, and CE projects, payment-related decisions frequently create downstream delays, especially when they’re made late or without full architectural context.
Here are the top three payment-related reasons D365 implementations get delayed.
1. Decision Paralysis Around Payment Processor Selection
Payment processing feels like a major financial decision, because it is. That leads to:
- Endless internal debates
- Loyalty to a legacy provider
- Competing stakeholder opinions
- Executive hesitation
- “We’ll finalize it later” language in the SOW
When processor selection is marked as TBD, it often lingers until development has already started. By the time the decision is made:
- Integration assumptions may be wrong
- Connector availability may be limited
- Development timelines may need to shift
As we explain in Dynamics 365 Payment Processing: What Customers Must Know Before Implementation, payment processing decisions need to happen during architecture, not after development begins. What could have been a 2–3 week selection process turns into a multi-month stall. The longer payment processing stays unresolved, the fewer options remain.
2. Technology-Agnostic Recommendations That Ignore D365 Integration Reality
One of the biggest risks comes from payment processor recommendations made without deep knowledge of Dynamics 365. This commonly happens when:
- A Big 4 consulting firm recommends a processor
- An executive chooses based on rates alone
- A corporate relationship drives the decision
- A non-technical stakeholder leads the evaluation
The problem? Payment processing in Dynamics 365 is not just about rates, it touches tokenization, settlement timing, device support, PCI compliance, and connector compatibility. A processor can look perfect in a financial analysis and still create serious integration challenges inside D365. For the full breakdown of why, see Dynamics 365 Payment Processing: Why It’s Not Plug-and-Play.
Integration gaps are where delays happen.
3. Late Discovery of Payment Integration Gaps in D365 Implementations
This is the most expensive category of delay. A seemingly “small” requirement surfaces late, such as:
- Marketing prompts on POS devices
- Loyalty enrollment at checkout
- Shopify omnichannel token sharing
- Text-to-pay capabilities
- Cross-border processing
- Phone order PCI workflows
The payment processor may technically support the feature, but the D365 integration layer may not. When that mismatch is discovered:
- Custom development is required
- Change orders are issued
- Go-live dates move
- Executive escalations begin
At that point, there’s no easy pivot. You’re deep into build.
How Payment Processing Pricing Impacts D365 Implementation Timelines
Sometimes the delay isn’t technical; it’s financial. Teams pause implementation because:
- They don’t understand interchange fees
- They’re debating flat rate vs interchange-plus
- They’re unsure how pricing impacts margin
If that’s the sticking point, these guides help clarify the fundamentals:
- What Are Interchange Fees? (And Why They Matter for ERP)
- Interchange Plus vs Flat Rate: Which Fits Your D365 Implementation?
Pricing clarity reduces hesitation and hesitation reduces delays.
How to Prevent Payment-Related D365 Delays
Most Dynamics 365 implementation delays tied to payment processing fall into one of three buckets:
- Delayed decision-making
- Technology-agnostic processor selection
- Late integration requirement discovery
All three are preventable.
- Start early.
- Validate integrations.
- Map token flow.
- Align finance and IT before development begins.
That’s exactly where advisory firms like Pathfynder step in — helping teams evaluate payment architecture before it becomes a go-live blocker. Because in Dynamics 365 projects, payment processing isn’t just about transactions. It’s about protecting your timeline.