Navigating the EMV Testing and Certification Process
November 27, 2024
EMVCo is truly a payment industry success story. Since its incorporation in 1999, the consortium of industry leaders has seen its technology adopted by card issuers, acquirers, and merchants across the globe to include more than 14 billion credit and debit cards and millions of point-of-sale (POS) acceptance locations.
The net effect has been a significant reduction in card-present fraud, up to 90% in some markets.
According to the EMVCo website, EMV transactions are more secure than traditional mag stripe processing because their “chip technology uses advanced cryptography to generate a one-time security code (cryptogram) for each transaction that allows the card issuer and merchant point-of-sale terminal to authenticate the card. The security code is unique to each transaction and cannot be reused, which helps prevent counterfeit, lost, and stolen fraud.”
While they don’t actually process any transactions directly, the EMVCo website further explains that the various specifications that they manage and maintain “provide a blueprint for chip technology (both contact and contactless) to work consistently anywhere in the world to deliver the same result – secure, seamless and reliable in-store payments.”
Even as we congratulate EMVCo on all they have accomplished over the past 25 years, we must also recognize that the journey has not always been easy and, even today, significant effort is required for any organization that wants or needs to support the EMV standards.
Supporting EMVCo’s advanced cryptography requires engagement and close cooperation from a broad range of industry participants, including card manufacturers, device vendors, and software providers, as well as all of the networks, processors, and merchant or bank systems that touch EMV messages in flight.
In order to ensure that consumer transactions are processed securely and consistently across the globe, EMVCo has published thousands of pages of specifications (i.e., Books) that detail how all of the various components of an EMV contact or contactless payment must behave and interact.
In addition to all of this documentation, EMVCo has also developed and oversees a rigorous testing and certification process that helps all industry participants stay current with the various specifications as they evolve, while also maintaining visibility on how other partners and peers are keeping pace.
Here is how EMVCo defines the first two testing levels that apply primarily to device and terminal manufacturers:
The final integration test, Level 3, is different and is defined as follows:
This means the chip terminal must be complete with its EMVCo-approved hardware (L1) and software kernel and payment application (L2) in place and must be configured with the right application before being connected to a test environment or host simulator, which mimics authorization responses from payment systems.
L3 testing evaluates and confirms that an EMV-compliant payment acceptance terminal will work with merchant or bank systems to enable end-to-end transaction acceptance. The testing helps ensure that a new or upgraded terminal (hardware and/or software) meets the specific requirements and recommendations of the individual payment systems before it is brought to market.
Unfortunately, these processes are not as easy as 1, 2, 3. EMV testing, certification, and recertification can be expensive, time-consuming, and frustrating. Some of the challenges include:
After 25 years, it has become increasingly clear that supporting the EMV standards can, and does, provide a number of benefits across the payment industry. The enhanced security provided by EMV cryptography has significantly reduced the incidence of card-present fraud across the globe.
However, adoption and continued support of the EMVCo standards does carry significant overhead that must be factored into the overall value proposition.
Payment industry participants should invest in modern tools and relationships that can help minimize the time, effort, and cost associated with EMV testing and certification.
In the next edition of this blog, we will dig deeper into the capabilities of our Web FASTest platform and look at how this innovative solution can help improve the speed, accuracy, and efficiency of your testing for both EMV contact and contactless processing.
Interested in learning more about improving your EMV testing and certification processes? Get in touch with our team today. We’d love to help.
Paragon ATM simulation tools provide the features, functions and flexible automation options so that you can run more tests in less time - improving quality, shortening delivery cycles, reducing costs, fostering collaboration, and increasing channel profitability.