If you’re building a SaaS or digital product from India, Razorpay is one of the first payment gateways you’ll come across. And for good reason. It’s reliable, well-documented, and supports a wide range of payment methods like cards, UPI, net banking, and wallets. You can get up and running quickly without dealing with too much infrastructure complexity. But the real question isn’t whether Razorpay works. It’s whether it works once you start scaling globally. What Razorpay actually does Razorpay is a payment gateway. It sits between your application and the banking system, handling: Payment collection Transaction authorisation Fraud checks Settlement to your bank account A typical flow looks like this: Customer selects Razorpay at checkout Enter payment details (card, UPI, etc.) Razorpay processes and validates the transaction Funds are settled into your account From an engineering standpoint, it’s a clean abstraction over payment rails. Why developers like Razorpay There’s a lot to like, especially early on.…