Why do European checkouts take so long and is there a straightforward solution to that customer friction?
“As it turns out, there is no silver bullet,” said Balipjepalli in the session. Instead, he pointed to a whole host of micro-optimizations merchants could do to their checkout process to cut down on the time it takes consumers to get through it.
While not mentioned by Stripe’s Lemon and Balipjepalli as a reason for the length of European checkouts, it was clear from May’s MRC Barcelona 2023 conference that part of the problem lies with the EU’s PSD2 regulation. To fulfill the regulation’s Strong Customer Authentication (SCA) requirement, European merchants are using 3DS 2.0 authentication for most of their transactions. This adds on average 60 seconds to checkout, said Renan Renner, Product Lead for Authentication at Adyen, at the MRC Barcelona conference. That means, close to one-third of the time Europeans spend in checkout is spent authenticating their identity.
For European travel merchants, who were the target audience of Phocuswright EU, this must especially be true since most SCA exemptions do not apply to typical travel transactions. For example, the average ticket price of packages from online travel agencies (OTAs) or for airline tickets is too high to apply the low-value transaction exemption.