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Risk & Fraud Prevention

A chargeback doesn’t knock. It doesn’t wait for your side of the story. It charges your account, reverses the sale, and hands you a fee — all before you’ve said a word.

chargeback payment processing merchant account dispute

Chargeback payment processing is one of the least explained and most consequential parts of accepting card payments. I’ve had merchants call me after their first chargeback genuinely confused about what happened. The sale was real. The customer was standing right there. They swiped the card, it approved, and three weeks later $340 was pulled from their account with a notice they didn’t understand.

Most merchants don’t know how chargebacks work until one hits. And by then, the clock is already running.

The Basics

What Is Chargeback Payment Processing — And Why Does It Work This Way

A chargeback is a forced reversal of a card transaction, initiated by the cardholder’s bank. When a customer disputes a charge with their bank — for any reason — the bank can pull the funds directly from your merchant account and return them to the customer while the dispute is investigated.

The key word is “while.” The money leaves first. The investigation happens after. You are presumed responsible until proven otherwise, and you have a limited window — typically 10 to 30 days depending on the card network — to respond with evidence.

This is not a flaw in the system. It’s how the system was designed. Card networks built chargeback rights into their rules to protect consumers and drive card adoption. The dispute process is defined by Visa and Mastercard — not your processor — and the cost of that protection falls entirely on merchants.

StepWhat HappensWho Controls It
1Customer disputes charge with their bankCardholder
2Issuing bank reverses funds provisionallyCardholder’s bank
3Merchant receives chargeback noticeYour processor
4Merchant responds with evidence (10–30 days)You
5Bank issues final ruling — funds returned or keptCardholder’s bank
The Cost

What a Chargeback Payment Processing Dispute Actually Costs

Most merchants focus on the reversed sale amount — and that’s real money. But the full cost of a chargeback is higher than the transaction itself.

The reversed sale — the full transaction amount is pulled from your account immediately.
The chargeback fee — most processors charge $15–$50 per dispute, win or lose. This fee is non-refundable.
The original processing fee — the interchange and markup you paid when the transaction processed are not returned.
Your time — gathering receipts, correspondence, delivery confirmation, and submitting a rebuttal takes real hours.
If you win — the sale amount is returned. The chargeback fee typically is not. The processing fee is not.

On a $200 transaction, a lost chargeback can cost $240–$260 all in — the sale, the fee, the original processing cost. On a $50 transaction, you can easily spend more in time and fees fighting it than the dispute is worth.

The Ratio

What Happens When Your Chargeback Payment Processing Ratio Gets Too High

This is the part most merchants don’t know about until it’s a problem. Visa and Mastercard monitor every merchant’s chargeback ratio — chargebacks divided by total transactions — on a monthly basis. The threshold that triggers consequences depends on the network — see chargeback ratio thresholds for the full breakdown of Visa VAMP, Mastercard ECP, and what each one triggers.

At 1% or above, your merchant account enters a monitoring program. What happens next depends on your processor and the card network, but the typical progression looks like this:

Early warning (0.65–0.99%) — some processors notify you informally. No penalties yet but the clock is running. Friendly fraud disputes are one of the fastest-growing drivers of merchants entering this zone.
Monitoring program (1%+) — Visa and Mastercard place your account in a formal program. Additional fees apply — often $50–$100 per chargeback above the threshold on top of your existing dispute fees.
Sustained high ratio — processors can place a reserve on your account, holding a percentage of your deposits as a security buffer. Some terminate the account entirely.
Terminated merchant account — your business is placed on the MATCH list (Member Alert to Control High-Risk Merchants). Being on MATCH makes it extremely difficult to open a new merchant account for up to 5 years.

A 1% ratio sounds small. If you process 200 transactions a month, that’s 2 chargebacks. Businesses with subscription billing, online sales, or high-ticket items hit this threshold faster than they expect.

The Defense

How to Fight a Chargeback — And How to Prevent One

When a chargeback arrives, knowing how to fight a chargeback starts with one thing: documentation. The evidence that wins disputes is specific — signed receipts, delivery confirmation, communication records showing the customer received what they paid for, and clear refund policy documentation. Vague responses lose. Specific documentation wins.

But fighting chargebacks is reactive. Prevention is worth far more. The most effective ways to reduce chargeback exposure:

Use clear billing descriptors

The name that appears on your customer’s card statement should match your business name. “Unknown charge” is the most common trigger for a dispute that had nothing to do with fraud.

Issue refunds proactively

A refund costs you the sale. A chargeback costs you the sale plus fees plus ratio damage. When a customer is unhappy, refund first.

Get signatures and keep records

For high-ticket transactions especially, a signed receipt or authorization is the difference between winning and losing a dispute.

Have a direct support contact at your processor

When a chargeback notice arrives, time matters. Knowing exactly who to call — not a 1-800 queue — can mean the difference between a complete response and a missed deadline.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a chargeback in payment processing?

A chargeback is a forced transaction reversal initiated by the cardholder’s bank — not the merchant. The issuing bank pulls the funds from your merchant account and returns them to the cardholder while a dispute is investigated. You lose the sale amount plus a chargeback fee, typically $15–$100, regardless of outcome.

How long does a merchant have to respond to a chargeback?

Typically 7–30 days from notification, depending on the card network and your processor. Missing the response window forfeits your right to dispute the claim. When a chargeback hits, respond immediately with documentation — the signed receipt, delivery confirmation, communication records, and any evidence the transaction was authorized.

What chargeback ratio triggers a processor review?

Visa and Mastercard monitor merchants who exceed 1% of transactions resulting in chargebacks. Above that threshold you enter monitoring programs with fees and potential account restrictions. Above 2% you risk being placed on the MATCH list — which makes obtaining a new merchant account difficult for up to five years.

Next Step

Know What You’re Paying Before a Chargeback Costs You More

Chargeback fees vary significantly by processor — and high-ratio merchants often pay the most. A free statement review shows you exactly what your processor charges per dispute, whether your pricing structure increases your exposure, and what a fair account looks like at your volume.

Get Your Free Statement Review

No obligation • No pressure • Response within one business day

Call (833) 382-1992 Email hello@brooksidepayments.com
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Kevin wrote this. But if he's wrong, we'll make it right — and demote Kevin to sharpening pencils. BeBetter@brooksidepayments.com