


Komission is not a payment provider. It is an independent broker: its model is built on objective recommendation, not on selling a proprietary product. When Komission adds Lyzi to its panel of 80+ solutions and steers its merchant clients toward crypto payment, this is not a commercial partnership it is a market signal.
Crypto payment is no longer a niche feature that a handful of early adopters offer experimentally. It is a payment method that specialised brokers now recommend as part of a structured payment acceptance strategy.
Founded by Jérémy Meunier — 10 years heading the Sales Division of a major French POS terminal distributor (+230,000 terminals, +17,000 clients), then co-founder of an all-in-one payment orchestrator reaching +€20M ARR, and board member of the French payment industry association — Komission is one of the best-positioned actors in the market to assess the real maturity of a payment solution.
Its model: identify the best-fit solution for each merchant profile across 80+ referenced providers — PSPs, acquirers, orchestrators, crypto solutions — with no conflict of interest tied to exclusivity.
The fact that Komission has created a dedicated Lyzi page in its catalogue and published a recommendation article on its blog means one specific thing: Lyzi passes the test of an expert who has evaluated hundreds of payment solutions and knows how to separate what works from what is marketing.
For merchants in the process of selecting their payment infrastructure, this is a strong qualification signal.
In its recommendation, Komission positions Lyzi across several merchant profiles:
Komission's added value in this context: its PSP fee simulator and multi-PSP migration expertise allow merchants to compare the real cost of Lyzi integration against their current processing costs — before committing.
Komission does not reference gimmicks. Here is why crypto payment now justifies a structured recommendation:
12% of French people hold crypto assets (ADAN – KPMG), skewing heavily toward 18–35 year olds and international profiles. Across Europe, nearly 10% of the population holds crypto assets according to ECB estimates. These users spend in physical retail and online — but find almost no merchant infrastructure capable of accepting them.
A merchant activating crypto in 2026 is not ahead of the curve. They are filling a genuine distribution gap on a customer base that already exists.
Crypto payments via Lyzi generate transaction fees that are structurally lower than traditional card networks on certain basket sizes. For merchants analysing their effective processing rate, adding a crypto channel with low interchange cost mechanically improves the weighted average cost of their payment acceptance.
This is precisely the angle that a broker like Komission — whose flagship tool is payment fee analysis — is best placed to quantify for its clients.
Crypto holders are statistically over-represented among international travellers and premium buyers. For the merchant profiles Komission serves — retail, hospitality, restaurants, independent professionals — this is a high-conversion segment with immediate upside.
Komission does not recommend an app. It recommends a crypto payment infrastructure:
Lyzi's merchant network — Printemps, Porsche, Lamborghini, Fitness Park, Barrière Group, JOA Casinos, SBM Monaco — demonstrates the capacity to operate at scale across demanding multi-site retail verticals.
From the merchant's operational standpoint, the experience is functionally identical to a contactless card payment. No specific staff training is required.
Explore Lyzi's use cases: Retailers · E-commerce · Local Merchants · PSP & Banks


