
Bolt
E-commerce fraud protection software
Payment gateways
Fraud detection software
Web security software
E-commerce software
Payment software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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- Retail and wholesale
- Accommodation and food services
- Arts, entertainment, and recreation
What is Bolt
Bolt is a checkout and payments platform for online merchants that combines payment processing with account-based checkout, fraud tools, and shopper identity features. It is used by e-commerce teams to reduce checkout friction, manage payment acceptance, and help mitigate payment fraud and chargebacks. The product typically deploys via integrations with common commerce platforms and through APIs for custom storefronts. Bolt positions its networked shopper accounts and integrated checkout + fraud workflow as a differentiating approach versus standalone fraud scoring tools.
Integrated checkout and fraud
Bolt combines checkout, payments, and fraud decisioning in a single workflow, which can reduce the need to stitch together multiple point solutions. This can simplify operational handoffs between payments, risk, and e-commerce teams. For merchants that want a unified experience, it can reduce integration and vendor-management overhead compared with deploying separate fraud and payment components.
Merchant and shopper accounts
Bolt supports account-based checkout experiences that can leverage returning shopper identity signals across sessions. This can help merchants balance friction and risk by using more context than a one-time guest checkout. The approach is useful for e-commerce businesses that prioritize repeat purchase flows and want identity-linked checkout behavior as an input to risk controls.
Platform and API integrations
Bolt offers integrations for common e-commerce stacks and APIs for custom implementations, supporting different merchant maturity levels. This can speed time-to-launch for standard deployments while still allowing deeper customization for larger teams. Compared with tools focused only on fraud scoring, the broader integration surface can cover checkout UX, payment acceptance, and risk controls together.
Less modular architecture
Because Bolt bundles checkout, payments, and fraud capabilities, it may be less flexible for merchants that prefer best-of-breed components. Organizations with an existing payment processor or established fraud stack may face overlap or re-platforming decisions. This can increase switching costs compared with adopting a standalone fraud detection layer.
Risk control transparency varies
Fraud platforms differ in how much model explainability, rule control, and decision audit detail they expose to merchants. Depending on the plan and integration, teams may find they need additional internal tooling to meet governance, dispute, or compliance workflows. Merchants with advanced risk operations may require deeper customization than an integrated checkout-first product typically provides.
Fit depends on merchant profile
Bolt is primarily oriented to online retail checkout flows, so it may be a weaker fit for non-checkout fraud use cases (for example, broader enterprise payment monitoring across multiple channels). Global merchants may also need to validate coverage for local payment methods, currencies, and regional risk requirements. Complex multi-brand or marketplace models can require additional implementation work beyond standard storefront deployments.
Seller details
Bolt Financial, Inc.
San Francisco, CA, USA
2014
Private
https://www.bolt.com
https://x.com/bolt
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bolt/