Chargeback

Definition

A chargeback is a reversal of a completed card transaction initiated by the issuing bank when a customer disputes a payment due to fraud, service issues, or incorrect billing.

How this works

The customer raises a dispute with the issuing bank. The bank reviews the claim and sends a chargeback request to the acquirer. The merchant submits evidence. Based on validation, the transaction is either reversed or upheld.

Benefits

• Protects customers from fraudulent or unauthorized charges
• Ensures fair dispute resolution
• Builds trust in digital transactions
• Encourages merchants to maintain transaction transparency

FAQs

Chargebacks occur due to fraud, duplicate charges, incorrect billing, item not received cases, or service related disputes.

If the dispute is valid, the merchant bears the financial loss along with penalties or fees.

Yes. Merchants can submit supporting documents such as invoices, delivery proof, and transaction logs.

By improving transaction validation, customer communication, fraud control, and refund workflows.