Your business model means no retention and no return customers. This is mostly a one-time transaction thus it won't generate sustainable revenue.
And this one transaction is absolutely crucial for the business in need of it.
I might be your customer soon. I have less than 2,500 customers and I would consider any amount under $1,500 a no-brainer "shut up and take my money" for the move - and probably even a larger amount.
I appreciate the suggestion and I hope we can help you soon. The lower price is intended to attract customers now and help us understand different set ups which might need a custom solution and a custom price. Once established and the tool is more robust we do expect prices to increase. Please don't hesitate in contacting us in the future.
I agree with the commenter above, you’re too cheap, which signals that you have a disconnect with the value you provide, especially since you’ll have no recurring revenue.
I assume moving Stripe accounts is extremely business critical, and people will want to speak, understand and be hand-held by experienced professionals during this time.
Anyone who would consider paying $299 but not $1,500 to move their Stripe accounts is not the customer you want to deal with.
I was you until one of our customers asked to increase their invoice from $3k to $4k, saying “You've been instrumental to my sleep this week”. (this was data migration between two finance systems)
I think you’re hugely underestimating the value you offer.
We're just starting, and the second step is a review via a scheduled call or a form to understand the use case. If our automation can solve it easily, the $299 or $499 is enough for now and we can always increase the price later. If the automation cannot handle it, at least we understand a different problem and can offer a tailored solution for a tailored price, so it works as a lead generation and to make the tool more robust.
It might be the wrong target but few months ago I was probably considered one of these customers that you don't want to deal with.
You might be right but these clients are also harder to close. I’d say our goal at the moment is helping early stages business with less complex set ups while generating leads to learn about other companies Stripe configurations to improve our tool and build reputation.
And the quotes I got were way over the $499.
It does and I appreciate the advices but right now we’re focusing on feedback and improving our tool.
This is a one-time payment, easy to raise the prices later without customers complain.
Use or incorporate any of our Marks in your own trademark, service mark, trade dress, trade name, website name, domain name, corporate name, or social-media handle (or any other source-identifying use), or use any trademark, service mark, trade dress, trade name, website name, domain name, corporate name, or social-media handle (or any other source-identifying use) that is likely to be confused with any of our Marks.
It's a concern we raised while starting the project but the other services I mentioned also had Stripe in their names and have been operating for a few years. Because our product is so connected to Stripe we felt that it was necessary to make its purpose clear so we took the gamble and added to our content that we are not affiliated to them. If we have to change the name in the future that is something we will have to deal with when the time comes.
That’s a pretty bold take. I bet they’re a few months out. And I don’t think it makes sense to characterize it as a “field day” for stripe’s legal department - trademark enforcement isn’t a profit center. More likely a lightly edited boilerplate letter and a timeline to comply, which GP has already acknowledged.
I haven’t run a biz on Stripe, but as an ex-employee the two potential problems I worry about for you immediately are:
1. Account takeovers, helped by your service. Maybe a non-issue in practice, but it’d be a PITA if you get tangled up in that.
2. Handling the long tail of Stripe API version changes. Hopefully it’s straightforward enough, and maybe you can simply require your users to upgrade if they’re on something older that you don’t support. I don’t have any specific thing in mind, but it feels inevitable to me.
But awesome job and good luck! I hope it succeeds, it sounds like a good service to me!
I was in the same situation as the OP 2 years ago and because of the migration nightmare I kept both accounts, new subscriptions would occur in the new account while old ones would stay in the legacy account.
Stripe has many issues, the missing migration is one. In my case there is alos the fact that there is no "company name" field and there is no way to issue an invoice correction for subscriptions... This makes it problematic for B2B use cases. I have alrady contacted them multiple times to ask them to add these very basic features but to no avail.
Had I known this before I would probably not have used them.
Where/what object would you like to use the company name field in?
> For the Invoice, but also to clearly identify the customer, for a B2B customer you have the company name and the name of the person in charge for the subscription. Both are essential. Currently Stripe only has a "name" field.
Can you describe a situation where you need to do an invoice correction on subscriptions (ie how do you handle this now)?
> The customer put a wrong address, a wrong or missing VAT number. Then a few months later the accountant notices the mistake and you have to issue a correction.
Currently Stripe is clearly focused B2C, but I am doing B2B.
I did a cross-country account migration for ImprovMX in January 2025.
It was a total nightmare, and definitely the vast majority of the acquisition migration work.
We ended up with a scheme where each customer was migrated over, as a "trial" account until it converted over to a regular paid subscription on the next subscription renewal time.
I wonder how you guys handle that.
We did see some similar services out there, but we didn't deem them high quality and trustworthy. It's kind of hard to build a reputation around a service you only use once. If our acquisition broker had said "use stripemove.com, we've done it many times, they're great", we probably would have forked over the cash immediately.
Consider reaching out to saas acquisition brokers!
Thanks for the advice. Yes, building a reputation is the hardest challenge when you have a once-off kind of product. Hopefully the low price can attract leads and we can start from there, although I understand that it can also backfire and make it look low quality and untrustworthy but we need to start somewhere.
Our tool tries to explain each step in detail and also links to the specific Stripe documentation to help the user understand the process to build trust.
The subscription transfer is done as a trial, following Stripe's recommendation.
Honestly, a low price for a product like this makes no sense, and might give the opposite signal. Real, trustworthy businesses know what they're worth and charge accordingly. Businesses know that if this process screws up they could lose or over-charge customers and have to make refunds.
What's the alternative? Pay someone to manually move records over one-by-one. I'd estimate that costs a few dollars per customer. If you can be slightly cheaper than that, they'd be silly not to pay.
>I contacted a couple of services that help with this kind of migration, but their quotes were way over my budget
I guess I'm "that guy." Have you considered that the reason is this as you say is niche thing and there simply is not the market to make it profitable? That is the reason they have to charge out of your budget for it to be worth their time?
Maybe the maintenance and upkeep of the site is low enough that it doesn't matter. (I do hope so i'm not here to watch people fail.)
I would actually target it at those exact businesses rather than individuals. B2B tool. Let them handle the mess of sales negotiations and change your pricing model to the number of accounts or something like that. Accounting firms always have a million high priced tiny tools they use for odd cases. Ask me how I know.....
You might be and I hope there are no hard feelings about me launching such a tool but as I mentioned this is something I wished existed when I had to go through this process and while I understand charging more because it's a niche market, my set up was quite "simple" and I think it can help solo indie entrepreneurs in the same situation. This is not my main business and the lower price should attract customers now and help us understand different set ups which might need a custom solution and a custom price.
On your last paragraph are you suggesting a partnership? If so you can contact us through the website.
How are you dealing with privacy and data concerns? Accessing a Stripe account is a big privacy concern and should be handled with highest order of care and data protection
We don’t save any data from the customers in our platform. The migration happens via restricted Stripe API keys from one account to the other with minimal permissions and we can't make changes to the account beyond what's necessary for the transfer. Once the process is done you can just revoke the API keys access.
> I didn’t realize how much of a headache switching countries can be
Indeed, and in some areas, it's easier to make the move with the government, than getting all the for-profit services to accept your country change.
For example, Sony/Playstation straight up refuses to change the country on your account, so even though I lived in Spain for more than 10 years, Playstation Store is still in Swedish and using SEK, and when I reached out to support they told me to create a new account if I wanted to change the country.
Google is another company where moving countries is really disorganized. I still get emails in Swedish, and a "payment/billing account" (different from "payment method") is still somehow locked to Sweden and cannot be changed or removed.
To actually get the residency with the government, I basically had to queue at the police station for some hour, then go to the bank and then I'm 100% done with my move. I'm surprised how much easier it was to deal with the government about this move, than companies that I actually pay money to...
I would be very tempted to invoke GDPR in this situation. Company's have an obligation to hold accurate data about you[1], which clearly neither Google or Sony are currently doing if they think your payment account is in Sweden, or your local currency is SEK.
Yes, we use Stripe's official APIs and follow their recommended migration practices.
There are other services also helping with this process and they have been operating for a few years.
“Transfer everything with few clicks” should be “Transfer everything with a few clicks”; although the former version is not grammatically incorrect it’s not how this phrase is typically used.
We went with it because the other services I mentioned also had Stripe in their names and have been operating for a few years. At the moment our product is so connected to Stripe that we felt having Stripe in the name was necessary to make its purpose clear. We added to our content that we are not affiliated to them, if we have to change the name in the future that is something we will have to deal with.
I don't know the ecosystem, but seemingly Stripe themselves lists some projects/products/organizations that themselves have "Stripe" in their name, as part of the "Stripe Partner Ecosystem": https://stripe.partners/?search=stripe&sort=relevance
Still, risky to use someone else's trademark regardless, if they suddenly don't like you anymore they'll start to enforce it at the worst moment.
>I don't know the ecosystem, but seemingly Stripe themselves lists some projects/products/organizations that themselves have "Stripe" in their name, as part of the "Stripe Partner Ecosystem": https://stripe.partners/?search=stripe&sort=relevance
The issue isn't having "Stripe" in the product name, it's having it in a way that implies it's by Stripe, mostly by putting it first. The top 3 hits from your linked search don't really have that issue. "Stripe Move" makes it sound like it's a product from stripe, "Move for Stripe" would not.
Was wondering about this as well. Might fly under the radar for a while but if your project grows you might draw attention from Stripe and having to rebrand later on will become difficult.
Also, what if you want to support this type of migration for other payment processors in the future? This name ties to just Stripe.
Also, tiny grammatical nitpick: the subheading should use the word seamlessly, not seamless there I think.
Your business model means no retention and no return customers. This is mostly a one-time transaction thus it won't generate sustainable revenue.
And this one transaction is absolutely crucial for the business in need of it.
I might be your customer soon. I have less than 2,500 customers and I would consider any amount under $1,500 a no-brainer "shut up and take my money" for the move - and probably even a larger amount.
Lower prices attract customers you don’t necessarily want to deal with, e.g. https://blog.readme.com/getting-rid-of-our-cheapest-plan-a-m...
I agree with the commenter above, you’re too cheap, which signals that you have a disconnect with the value you provide, especially since you’ll have no recurring revenue.
I assume moving Stripe accounts is extremely business critical, and people will want to speak, understand and be hand-held by experienced professionals during this time.
Anyone who would consider paying $299 but not $1,500 to move their Stripe accounts is not the customer you want to deal with.
I was you until one of our customers asked to increase their invoice from $3k to $4k, saying “You've been instrumental to my sleep this week”. (this was data migration between two finance systems)
I think you’re hugely underestimating the value you offer.
Exactly, you don’t want to deal with developers who think >$299 is too expensive and end up building their own product.
You want to deal with business people who understand what’s at stake and won’t spare thousands to make this go smoothly.
https://stripe.com/legal/marks
Use or incorporate any of our Marks in your own trademark, service mark, trade dress, trade name, website name, domain name, corporate name, or social-media handle (or any other source-identifying use), or use any trademark, service mark, trade dress, trade name, website name, domain name, corporate name, or social-media handle (or any other source-identifying use) that is likely to be confused with any of our Marks.
1. Account takeovers, helped by your service. Maybe a non-issue in practice, but it’d be a PITA if you get tangled up in that.
2. Handling the long tail of Stripe API version changes. Hopefully it’s straightforward enough, and maybe you can simply require your users to upgrade if they’re on something older that you don’t support. I don’t have any specific thing in mind, but it feels inevitable to me.
But awesome job and good luck! I hope it succeeds, it sounds like a good service to me!
Stripe has many issues, the missing migration is one. In my case there is alos the fact that there is no "company name" field and there is no way to issue an invoice correction for subscriptions... This makes it problematic for B2B use cases. I have alrady contacted them multiple times to ask them to add these very basic features but to no avail.
Had I known this before I would probably not have used them.
Can you describe a situation where you need to do an invoice correction on subscriptions (ie how do you handle this now)?
> For the Invoice, but also to clearly identify the customer, for a B2B customer you have the company name and the name of the person in charge for the subscription. Both are essential. Currently Stripe only has a "name" field.
Can you describe a situation where you need to do an invoice correction on subscriptions (ie how do you handle this now)?
> The customer put a wrong address, a wrong or missing VAT number. Then a few months later the accountant notices the mistake and you have to issue a correction.
Currently Stripe is clearly focused B2C, but I am doing B2B.
It was a total nightmare, and definitely the vast majority of the acquisition migration work.
We ended up with a scheme where each customer was migrated over, as a "trial" account until it converted over to a regular paid subscription on the next subscription renewal time.
I wonder how you guys handle that.
We did see some similar services out there, but we didn't deem them high quality and trustworthy. It's kind of hard to build a reputation around a service you only use once. If our acquisition broker had said "use stripemove.com, we've done it many times, they're great", we probably would have forked over the cash immediately.
Consider reaching out to saas acquisition brokers!
Honestly, a low price for a product like this makes no sense, and might give the opposite signal. Real, trustworthy businesses know what they're worth and charge accordingly. Businesses know that if this process screws up they could lose or over-charge customers and have to make refunds.
What's the alternative? Pay someone to manually move records over one-by-one. I'd estimate that costs a few dollars per customer. If you can be slightly cheaper than that, they'd be silly not to pay.
Edit: I've been corrected by my collage. Stripe only copied customer records. We had to manually stop and recreate the subscriptions.
I guess I'm "that guy." Have you considered that the reason is this as you say is niche thing and there simply is not the market to make it profitable? That is the reason they have to charge out of your budget for it to be worth their time?
Maybe the maintenance and upkeep of the site is low enough that it doesn't matter. (I do hope so i'm not here to watch people fail.)
I would actually target it at those exact businesses rather than individuals. B2B tool. Let them handle the mess of sales negotiations and change your pricing model to the number of accounts or something like that. Accounting firms always have a million high priced tiny tools they use for odd cases. Ask me how I know.....
Indeed, and in some areas, it's easier to make the move with the government, than getting all the for-profit services to accept your country change.
For example, Sony/Playstation straight up refuses to change the country on your account, so even though I lived in Spain for more than 10 years, Playstation Store is still in Swedish and using SEK, and when I reached out to support they told me to create a new account if I wanted to change the country.
Google is another company where moving countries is really disorganized. I still get emails in Swedish, and a "payment/billing account" (different from "payment method") is still somehow locked to Sweden and cannot be changed or removed.
To actually get the residency with the government, I basically had to queue at the police station for some hour, then go to the bank and then I'm 100% done with my move. I'm surprised how much easier it was to deal with the government about this move, than companies that I actually pay money to...
[1] https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/uk-gdpr-guidance-and-re...
This is a half-joke, half-serious possible near future thing with LLM-based support agents.
Still, risky to use someone else's trademark regardless, if they suddenly don't like you anymore they'll start to enforce it at the worst moment.
The issue isn't having "Stripe" in the product name, it's having it in a way that implies it's by Stripe, mostly by putting it first. The top 3 hits from your linked search don't really have that issue. "Stripe Move" makes it sound like it's a product from stripe, "Move for Stripe" would not.
Also, what if you want to support this type of migration for other payment processors in the future? This name ties to just Stripe.
Also, tiny grammatical nitpick: the subheading should use the word seamlessly, not seamless there I think.