What Is a Chargeback and How Does It Affect Your Merchant Account | Swipe Saver Pro

Written by Swipe Saver Pro Team | Jun 18, 2026 3:01:56 PM

A chargeback happens when a cardholder disputes a transaction and their bank reverses the payment. Unlike a refund — which you initiate — a chargeback is initiated by the bank and reversed automatically, often before you have a chance to respond.

How the Chargeback Process Works

When a customer files a dispute, their issuing bank issues a provisional credit to the cardholder and notifies your processor, which debits the disputed amount from your account along with a chargeback fee — typically $15 to $100.

You have the opportunity to respond with evidence — receipts, delivery confirmation, signed agreements. If your evidence is accepted, the chargeback is reversed. If not, the loss is permanent.

Why Chargebacks Are a Processor Risk Signal

Your chargeback ratio is the number of chargebacks in a month divided by your total transactions. Visa's Dispute Monitoring Program activates at a 0.9% ratio. Mastercard's Excessive Chargeback Program activates at 1.5%. Once enrolled in a monitoring program, you face escalating fees and mandatory remediation. If not resolved, your account can be terminated.

The Most Common Chargeback Reasons

  • Fraud — customer claims they did not make the transaction
  • Not as described — product or service did not match what was advertised
  • Not received — customer claims the order was never delivered
  • Duplicate charge — customer was charged more than once
  • Subscription cancellation — customer claims they cancelled but was still billed

How to Reduce Chargebacks

  • Use a clear billing descriptor so customers recognize the charge on their statement
  • Send delivery confirmation and tracking information for physical goods
  • Publish a clear refund policy and make it easy to find
  • Respond to all disputes within the deadline — typically 7 to 14 days
  • Enroll in chargeback alert programs (Ethoca, Verifi) to intercept disputes before they become chargebacks

Check Your Chargeback Risk Free →

Swipe Saver Pro provides payment operations guidance only. This is not legal, financial, or regulatory advice. All decisions remain with the business owner.