The travel CFO’s guide to building a scalable, global payment stack

Emma Beardmore
Senior Associate, Brand and Content - EMEA

For travel CFOs, payments used to be a line item on the P&L to negotiate once a year. In 2026, that’s no longer enough. Travel businesses are selling, collecting, and paying in a web of different currencies - all while navigating ‘high-risk’ labels and razor-thin margins.
The hidden costs of a legacy stack
The first red flag is often the phrase: 'We’ve been with the same provider for 15 years.' While stability is good, legacy stacks are fragmented. You might have one provider for acquiring, another for FX, and a third for supplier payouts. Travel models amplify this inefficiency; one booking often triggers multiple back-end transactions (flights, hotels, transfers). Every ‘hop’ is an opportunity for FX fees, delays, and errors to eat your net margin.
The travel-specific problem: 15,000 Suppliers
In standard e-commerce, a purchase is simple. In travel, a single booking ID can touch dozens of parties. Matching what you’ve collected from a traveler to what you owe 15,000 different suppliers - in the right currency and on the right timeline - is the ultimate CFO challenge.
Matching as a first principle
Rebecca’s advice to CFOs is simple: matching is key. A modern setup looks like this:
Multi-currency acquiring & accounts: Use local acquiring to collect payments in the guest’s native currency, then settle and hold those balances in 20+ currencies—bypassing forced conversions and cross-border fees entirely.
Like-for-like settlement: If you collect in EUR, settle in EUR. Don't let a bank take a 2–3% cut just to move money into a GBP account when you'll eventually need those Euros to pay a hotel in Spain.
Integrated spend management: Beyond the booking itself, using a robust spend management software to empower your team is a no brainer. By issuing virtual and physical cards with built-in spend controls, you can manage everything from marketing SaaS to on-the-ground travel expenses in the same ecosystem you use for supplier payouts - ensuring no 'leakage' occurs at the operational level.
Build vs. buy: The ‘core vs. context’ rule
The ultimate goal for the modern CFO is to stop viewing payments as a cost of doing business and start seeing them as a lever for margin. Own the logic - your proprietary data model, booking rules, and approval policies - as this is your competitive advantage. Conversely, buy the plumbing by outsourcing regulated infrastructure like licenses, local payout rails, and card issuing to a partner built for multi-party complexity.
If it defines your guest experience, own it; if it requires a banking license, outsource it. This 'matching' strategy - integrating local acquiring, spend management, and virtual payouts - stops the 3% FX leak and transforms a fragmented stack into a streamlined, multi-currency engine designed for global scale.

Emma Beardmore
Senior Associate, Brand and Content - EMEA
Emma supports all things brand at Airwallex, bringing her love of travel and storytelling to the role. She enjoys writing about how Airwallex empowers businesses to expand seamlessly across borders.
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