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Compliance

PCI DSS Compliance: The 12 Requirements

If your business touches credit card data, PCI DSS is not optional. The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard is enforced by the major card brands through your bank, and it applies the moment you store, process, or transmit cardholder data. It is not a government law. It is a contractual requirement, which means the penalty for ignoring it is losing your ability to take card payments at all.

PCI DSS12 requirements6 goalsWho must comply4 min readUpdated Jun 2026

If your business touches credit card data, PCI DSS is not optional. The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard is enforced by the major card brands through your bank, and it applies the moment you store, process, or transmit cardholder data. It is not a government law. It is a contractual requirement, which means the penalty for ignoring it is losing your ability to take card payments at all.

The standard can look intimidating, but it organizes into twelve requirements under six plain goals. Read them as a checklist for keeping card data out of the wrong hands.

01

Who must comply

Applies to

Any entity that stores, processes, or transmits cardholder data: online and brick-and-mortar merchants, payment processors and gateways, and SaaS platforms that handle payment data. It is enforced by the card brands (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover) through your acquiring bank.

Even with Stripe

Using a third-party processor like Stripe or Square reduces your scope but does not eliminate your PCI obligations entirely. The goal is to shrink scope aggressively, not to assume it disappears.

If card data touches your systems at all, PCI DSS is in play.

The reach of PCI DSS surprises people. It is broader than just big retailers, and using a payment processor does not get you off the hook entirely.

02

The 12 requirements, by goal

The twelve requirements sound like a lot until you group them. Six goals organize the whole standard, and each one maps to a familiar security idea.

[[INSIGHT: The fastest way to comply with PCI DSS is to handle less card data. Every system that touches cardholder data falls into scope, so the smartest first move is not buying more controls, it is shrinking the footprint of where that data can go.]]

Key takeaways
  • PCI DSS applies to anyone who stores, processes, or transmits cardholder data.
  • It is enforced by the card brands through your acquiring bank, not by a government.
  • Using a processor like Stripe reduces scope but does not eliminate your obligations.
  • The standard is 12 requirements grouped into 6 goals.
  • The best first step is to shrink the systems that touch card data.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Who has to comply with PCI DSS?

Any entity that stores, processes, or transmits cardholder data: merchants, payment processors and gateways, and SaaS platforms that handle payment data. It is enforced by the card brands through your acquiring bank.

What are the PCI DSS requirements?

Twelve requirements grouped into six goals: build and maintain a secure network, protect cardholder data, maintain a vulnerability management program, implement strong access control, regularly monitor and test networks, and maintain an information security policy.

Do I still need PCI DSS if I use Stripe?

Usually yes, but with reduced scope. Using a third-party processor lowers your obligations, but it does not remove them entirely. Work to minimize the systems that touch card data.

Who enforces PCI DSS?

The major payment card brands, including Visa, Mastercard, Amex, and Discover, enforce it through your acquiring bank. It is a contractual requirement, not a government law.

Written and reviewed by Tech Jacks Solutions Security Practice. GRC and compliance practitioners.
Primary source: PCI Data Security Standard. Last reviewed June 2026.

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Tech Jacks Solutions

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