Author: Alena Sarri, Owner, Aquatots Swim School
Parent portal payments move billions of dollars through children’s activity platforms every year, yet almost nobody in fintech is paying attention. These parent portal payments flow through swim schools, dance studios, martial arts dojos, and gymnastics centres on platforms that look like scheduling tools but behave like payment processors.
Meanwhile, Toast turned this exact model into a $5 billion revenue engine in the restaurant sector. So why hasn’t anyone replicated it in children’s activities?
Parent Portal Payments Already Have the Infrastructure
Here’s what most people miss. The major children’s activity platforms have quietly built payment infrastructure that rivals what restaurants had five years ago.
Jackrabbit Technologies serves 7,000 to 17,000 activity centres across 35 countries. Moreover, it partnered with Adyen (the same processor behind Uber and McDonald’s) to launch its own branded payment product. Jackrabbit operates as a payment facilitator and even rolled out embedded lending through Adyen Capital, issuing over $225,000 in business loans within three months of launch.
Then there’s iClassPro, which takes a more aggressive approach. It requires all customers to use its integrated payment processing at 2.9% plus $0.50 per card transaction. That mandatory model means iClassPro captures revenue on every dollar flowing through parent portal payments on its platform. The result? Three consecutive years on the Inc. 5000 with 109% revenue growth.
SportsEngine goes even further. Its Motion product is free. No subscription fee at all. Instead, it charges a 1% technology fee plus standard processing on every transaction. If an organisation stops processing payments for 90 days, SportsEngine can disable the account. In other words, this is not a software company. It is a payments company using software as distribution.
The Family Data Advantage That Banks Would Kill For
Beyond processing transactions, parent portal payments create something far more valuable: a data moat.
Consider what a typical parent portal account contains. Stored credit cards and bank accounts. Billing history spanning years. Child ages and developmental milestones. Household composition. Spending patterns across multiple activities. Health and emergency contacts. That profile is richer than what a typical bank branch collects, and it refreshes weekly through active engagement.
Furthermore, the trust dynamics are unmatched. After all, parents hand these platforms their children’s personal data. They interact weekly. They stay enrolled for 18 to 24 months on average, with many families continuing for three to five years. Compare that to gym memberships churning at 30% annually or restaurant relationships that reset with every visit.
Bain & Company’s research confirms the value of this position. Contextual financial offerings presented at the point of natural engagement achieve conversion rates 5 to 10 times higher than traditional channels. Customer acquisition through embedded channels costs $5 to $15, versus $200 to $300 through traditional bank distribution. Parent portal payments sit at that exact intersection of context, trust, and frequency.
Toast Proved This Works, But Nobody Has Copied It
Toast now generates 82% of its $5 billion annual revenue from financial services, not software subscriptions. What’s more, its gross payment volume hit $42.2 billion in Q1 2025 alone. Toast Capital, its embedded lending arm, contributed $26 million in profit that same quarter.
Similarly, Shopify earns over 80% of revenue from merchant solutions. Brightwheel, the childcare management platform valued at $600 million, uses Stripe Connect to process tuition payments and reports that 90% of families pay on time through its system. As a result, each B2B sale creates 30 to 100 parent financial relationships automatically.
Andreessen Horowitz estimates that adding fintech to a vertical SaaS platform increases revenue per customer by 2 to 5 times. Despite this, parent portal payments in children’s activities remain stuck in utility mode. The EY-Parthenon and Finix 2024 survey found that 70% of platform respondents still treat payments as just revenue collection, not a growth engine.
This subscription payment fatigue hitting children’s services compounds the problem. Families are scrutinising recurring charges more than ever. Platforms that offer smarter payment options (instalments, family wallets, flexible billing) will keep customers while rigid ones bleed them.
A $40 Billion Market With Serious Deal Flow
The children’s extracurricular market exceeds $40 billion in the US alone. Australian parents spend AUD $4.7 billion annually on children’s activities. Likewise, UK families contribute £3.9 billion. The global swim school market is valued at $9.3 billion and projected to reach $17.8 billion by 2033.
In addition, the M&A activity tells a clear story. Global Payments acquired ACTIVE Network for $1.2 billion in 2017. A payment processor buying activity registration software. Essentially, that deal confirmed the thesis: the value is in the payment volume, not the software. Advent International built Xplor Technologies into a $3 to $4 billion platform by merging payment processors with activity software companies.
On top of that, Waud Capital took majority ownership of TeamSnap. DaySmart acquired Sawyer. NBC Sports grew SportsEngine from $39 million to over $100 million in revenue. Every acquirer saw the same thing: parent portal payments represent captive, recurring, high-trust financial relationships at scale. And the client churn data from these platforms could reshape how lenders assess risk for small operators.
The Whitespace Nobody Has Filled
Across every platform researched, the gaps are glaring. Not one offers buy-now-pay-later for expensive programs like holiday intensives or competitive squad fees. None provide family wallets or stored-value accounts. Zero platforms offer savings products tied to activity milestones or insurance bundles at enrolment. In fact, only Jackrabbit has ventured into merchant lending, and it has issued just $225,000.
By contrast, GlossGenius (salon software) launched embedded loans in early 2024. Toast Capital prints $26 million in quarterly profit. The embedded finance market is valued at over $100 billion globally and growing at 23 to 32% CAGR. As energy audit financing reshapes borrowing in Australia, parent portal payments represent an equally ripe opportunity waiting for someone to build it.
Ultimately, the platform that stops treating parent portal payments as a scheduling feature and starts treating them as a financial services channel will own the most valuable recurring relationship in consumer fintech. Multi-year. High-trust. Weekly engagement. Families at peak spending years.
That is not a point of sale. That is a distribution channel. And right now, nobody is treating it that way.
