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Taking Card Payments Over the Phone: A Practical Guide for UK SMEs

by

Team Teya

Running a busy pub, restaurant, or high-street retail shop means managing a constant stream of operational surprises. Picture this: it's Saturday night, your dining room is completely booked, and a regular calls up to secure a large Christmas party booking for next month. They want to pay the deposit immediately over the phone. Or perhaps you run a local boutique, and a loyal customer asks you to set aside a high-value item and process their card details before they arrive to pick it up.

When you can't see the cardholder, taking that payment smoothly becomes a balancing act.

According to the ResDiary UK & Ireland Hospitality Report, 51% of UK hospitality venues now require a deposit for group bookings, and venues that don't are losing an average of £3,621 per year to no-shows. But inputting card details manually exposes your business to security responsibilities, compliance obligations, and administrative delays that quickly eat into your margins.

If you accept Mail Order or Telephone Order (MOTO) payments incorrectly, you face regulatory risk and increased vulnerability to fraud.

What is a MOTO Payment?

A MOTO payment — short for Mail Order/Telephone Order — is officially classified by card networks as a Card-Not-Present (CNP) transaction. It happens whenever a customer shares their debit or credit card details with you over the phone, via post, or through secure email instead of tapping or inserting their card into a physical terminal.

Because there is no chip-and-PIN validation or contactless authentication, card networks view these transactions as higher risk than face-to-face payments.

Without the security of a physical card present, the liability for fraud or disputed transactions shifts directly to your business. If a fraudulent caller uses stolen card details, the true cardholder can file a chargeback, and your business loses both the money and the goods. Understanding how card payment fees work, including chargeback costs, is essential before enabling MOTO on your account.

How to Take Phone Payments Safely

To take card payments over the phone legally and securely in the UK, you have two primary options: using a Virtual Terminal on a computer or browser, or inputting the data directly into a MOTO-enabled smart terminal.

Here is the step-by-step workflow required to protect your team and your money:

Step 1: Check Your Provider Account for MOTO Permissions

You cannot simply type a card number into a standard terminal. Your payment provider must actively enable MOTO transaction profiles on your account. 

This ensures your processing rates are correct and your account is set up for Card-Not-Present fraud monitoring.

Step 2: Open Your Virtual Terminal or Prepare the Device

When a customer calls, log into your provider's secure web portal or select the manual MOTO entry function directly on your card machine screen.

Step 3: Collect Fraud Prevention Identifiers

As your customer reads their card details, fill in the mandatory fields:

  • The 16-digit card number

  • The expiration date

  • The 3-digit security code (CVV/CVC) on the back

  • Address Verification Service (AVS) details: Always ask for the numerical digits of their billing address and postcode. Matching AVS data against the cardholder's bank record is your primary line of defence against fraudulent orders

Step 4: Authorise and Confirm Immediately

Submit the payment details through the secure gateway. The system will instantly check for available funds and fraud markers, giving you a clear "Approved" or "Declined" response while the customer is still on the line.

A Simpler, Cheaper and Safer Alternative: Pay by Link

Rather than handling raw card data over the phone, many UK businesses are switching to pay-by-link for telephone orders. Instead of asking the customer to read out their card details, you generate a secure payment link on your device and send it to them via SMS or email: they complete the transaction themselves on their own phone or computer.

This approach eliminates the compliance burden of handling card data entirely, since the customer enters their own details in a secure environment. It also removes the risk of transcription errors and reduces your PCI DSS scope significantly.

Teya's pay-by-link is built directly into the platform — no third-party tool required. You can generate and send a link in seconds while the customer is still on the phone. You can also:

  • Set a custom expiry date on the link, or keep it open indefinitely

  • Cancel or reactivate links at any point

  • Personalise the checkout page with your business logo and terms

  • Receive an instant notification when the customer completes the payment

Staying Compliant with PCI DSS

When your team handles card numbers directly over the phone, your business enters the regulatory scope of the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) — a strict set of global security mandates designed to protect sensitive cardholder data. 

A guide by Merchant Savvy outlines the scale of card fraud in the UK and why compliance is non-negotiable for businesses of all sizes, with almost £395.7M lost in card-not-present transactions between 2013 and 2022. 

If card numbers are handled incorrectly, you risk data breaches and non-compliance penalties from your payment acquirer.

To stay compliant, follow these non-negotiable practices:

  • Never write card details down. Do not jot numbers, expiry dates, or CVV codes on order pads or paper. If you must note something temporarily, shred it immediately once the transaction is approved

  • Never record calls that capture card data. If your phone system records calls for quality purposes, you must pause the recording while card details are being read out. Storing audio of raw card digits violates PCI DSS rules

  • Never store card data digitally. No spreadsheets, notepads, or email drafts. Your system should act as a pass-through, processing data instantly without saving a single digit

How Teya Solves Phone Payments for UK Businesses

Many independent operators run a fragmented setup: card payments through one provider, business banking through a traditional high-street bank, and stock through a standalone EPOS system. When you take a phone deposit on a Saturday night, funds often don't arrive until Tuesday — leaving a cash flow gap precisely when you need working capital to pay suppliers on Monday.

Teya replaces this with a single integrated platform built for established UK high-street businesses. MOTO is built directly into the Teya app and portal — no web store required. 

Whether you are processing a contactless tap, entering card details manually for a phone order, or sending a pay-by-link to a caller, every transaction appears in the same dashboard with instant confirmation. 

And it connects directly with your EPOS setup: see how integrating your EPOS with Teya works in practice.

Next-Day Payouts, Seven Days a Week

Card transactions settle the very next morning — including weekends and bank holidays. Saturday's phone bookings land in your Teya Business Account on Sunday, so you have the capital to pay suppliers comfortably on Monday.

Real Human Support

When you need help with a phone order, you should not have to navigate automated systems. Teya's support team answers calls in under 10 seconds. No queues, no chatbots.

Accountant-Ready Books

Teya syncs automatically with Xero and QuickBooks: no manual spreadsheet uploads, no end-of-month reconciliation headaches. Xero pulls up to 12 months of transaction history; QuickBooks up to 24. Your books stay current without any extra admin on your part.

Transparent Pricing

No hidden PCI non-compliance fees, no long-term contracts, no unexpected surcharges. What you see is what you pay.

Phone Payments: Legacy Setup vs. Teya

Operational Area

Legacy Setup

The Teya Standard

Settlement Speed

2–3 business days; weekend funds delayed until Tuesday

Next morning, including weekends and bank holidays

Customer Support

Automated hold systems and long queues

Live human support answered in under 10 seconds

Bookkeeping

Manual statement matching across separate systems

Automated feeds to Xero, QuickBooks, and Sage

Contract Terms

Long-term lock-ins and opaque fee structures

Transparent pricing, no long-term contracts

Phone Payment Method

Virtual terminal only

MOTO terminal + pay-by-link

Ready to Streamline Your Business Finances?

Accepting phone orders should not come with administrative stress, delayed payouts, or confusing security requirements. With Teya, you get an integrated system that combines secure card processing, next-day settlements, pay-by-link, and real human support — built for the realities of running a UK high-street business.

Get started with Teya today or book a personalised system demo for your business.

Count on Teya for Your Phone Card Payments

Team Teya

Copyright © 2026 Teya Services Ltd. Os serviços de pagamento da Teya no Espaço Económico Europeu (EEE) são fornecidos pela Teya Iceland hf. (número de registro: 440686-1259). A Teya Iceland hf. tem autorização da Autoridade de Supervisão Financeira do Banco Central da Islândia para operar como uma instituição de crédito e do Banco de Portugal para operar em Portugal. Leia mais detalhes sobre a Teya Iceland hf.

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Copyright © 2026 Teya Services Ltd. Os serviços de pagamento da Teya no Espaço Económico Europeu (EEE) são fornecidos pela Teya Iceland hf. (número de registro: 440686-1259). A Teya Iceland hf. tem autorização da Autoridade de Supervisão Financeira do Banco Central da Islândia para operar como uma instituição de crédito e do Banco de Portugal para operar em Portugal. Leia mais detalhes sobre a Teya Iceland hf.

Portugal (Português)

Definições de cookies

Copyright © 2026 Teya Services Ltd. Os serviços de pagamento da Teya no Espaço Económico Europeu (EEE) são fornecidos pela Teya Iceland hf. (número de registro: 440686-1259). A Teya Iceland hf. tem autorização da Autoridade de Supervisão Financeira do Banco Central da Islândia para operar como uma instituição de crédito e do Banco de Portugal para operar em Portugal. Leia mais detalhes sobre a Teya Iceland hf.

Portugal (Português)

Definições de cookies