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Protect your business from chargebacks

A chargeback is when a cardholder files a dispute with their bank to reverse a transaction, claiming it was unauthorised, fraudulent, or the product or service was unsatisfactory.

This guide shows you how to:

🔗 Understand chargebacks

🔗 Identify common reasons for chargebacks

🔗 Protect your business with best practices for preventing chargebacks

🔗 Collect and present your evidence

How chargebacks work

  1. A customer buys something, but wants their money back. They can raise a chargeback request up to 120 days after their purchase

  2. The issuing bank reviews the customer's claim and may ask for more information

  3. The issuing bank will get in touch with the card network (ie. Visa or Mastercard) to notify the business's bank

  4. The business receives the notice of the chargeback and can respond within 7 to 30 days

  5. The issuing bank reviews all evidence in up to 70 days, then makes a decision

  6. The cardholder learns the decision, and gets the money if it's in their favour.

Common reasons for chargebacks

Fraudulent transactions

The transaction supposedly wasn't authorised

Product not received

The cardholder did not receive the item

Defective or not as described

The received product was damaged

Duplicate charges

Many charges for the same transaction

Cancellations not honoured

The cancelled order was still charged

Subscription issues

Recurring charges for supposedly cancelled subscriptions

Billing errors

Incorrect amounts charged

Customer service issues

Unresolved customer service disputes

Lack of recognition

Cardholders may not recognise the business name on their statement

Unauthorised use

Payments from unauthorised purchases, from a lost or stolen card

How chargebacks can affect your business

Financial impact

You could lose sales or get higher fees

Operational disruption

You may have to invest time in staff training and investigations

Reputation and trust

You could potentially lose current or future customers

Difficulty to secure payment processing

You may struggle to sign favourable agreements

Risk of account termination

Your payment processor or bank may end your relationships

Legal and compliance risks

You may have to deal with regulatory issues

Increased fraud risk

Your high chargeback rate may hint at cyber vulnerabilities

Impact on cashflow

Your revenue could get tied up during disputes

Best practices for preventing chargebacks

Clear descriptions

Transparent policies

Quality control

Educate customers

Proof of delivery

Avoid miscommunication

Prompt customer support

Monitor transactions

How to defend against a chargeback request

Keep detailed records

Document communication

Provide proof of delivery

Capture evidence of product quality

Include customer acknowledgments

Use transaction logs

Collect customer feedback

Prepare a response template

Stay organised