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Chargeback
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A chargeback is a reversal of a credit-card transaction, as viewed from the perspective of the merchant.
It usually occurs when a consumer files a complaint with their bank or credit/debit card provider. This
usually happens when a consumer discovers fraudulent transactions on their statement.
The bank will investigate complaints, and will "take back" the value of the original transaction, together
with an additional fee (from $0 to $50 USD, depending on the bank/provider used) directly from the
merchants account, unless the merchant can prove the transaction was legitimate.
Sometimes the consumer complaint is untrue, and their refund claim gets denied. In these situations, the
merchant will sometimes still be charged processing fees.
The merchant loses the goods or services sold, the payment, the fees for processing the payment, any
currency conversion commissions, and the chargeback penalty. For obvious reasons, many merchants
take steps to avoid chargebacks - such as not accepting suspicious transactions. This may spawn
collateral damage, where the merchant additionally loses legitimate sales by incorrectly blocking
legitimate transactions.
There are other forms of credit reversals that may also be referred to as chargebacks listed below.
A retrieval request is a pre-chargeback and a request for information (RFI). This may also attract a fee.
Some providers charge $10, and others do not refund this.
Contents
1 Reasons for chargeback
2 Handling chargebacks
3 Other types of chargebacks
4 References
5 See also
One of the most common reasons for a chargeback is known as a fraudulent transaction. A credit card is
used without the consent or proper authorization of the card holder. In most cases, a merchant is
responsible for charges fraudulently imposed on a customer.
Chargebacks can also result from a customer dispute over credit. This type of chargeback is usually
described as credit not processed. A customer may have returned merchandise to a merchant in return
for credit, but credit was never posted to the account. In this example, the merchant is responsible for
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Other types of chargebacks are related to technical problems between the merchant and the issuing bank,
whereby a customer was charged twice for a single transaction (duplicate processing) or other various
mistakes. Yet other chargebacks are related to the authorization process of a credit card transaction, for
example, if a transaction is declined by its issuing bank and the account is still charged.
Another reason for chargebacks are when a customer does not receive the item they paid for. In this
case, a chargeback is initiated and the payment to the merchant is reversed.
Handling chargebacks
A merchant is billed for chargebacks as they occur, along with other fees and settlements associated
with credit card acceptance. Because a merchant may be charged back in error, and because chargebacks
may often involve complicated customer disputes, a chargeback may be appealed by the merchant. This
process varies by credit card. If the chargeback is found to have been in error, a merchant will be
granted a reversal.
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Thieves occasionally abuse the chargeback system. For example, in a "Friendly Fraud", an unscrupulous
customer will make a purchase over the Internet with his own credit card and then issue a chargeback
once the product or service is received. In such cases merchants can have difficulty recovering payment.
Chargeback processing (handling) is complex as a result of frequent rule changes by the major credit
card companies (MasterCard, Visa, American Express, etc.). There is an emerging market for business
software that simplifies the chargeback process as well as separate chargeback processing services.
It is possible for the chargeback and associated fee to cause an overdraft or leave insufficient funds to
cover a subsequent withdrawal or debit from the merchant's account that received the chargeback. This
could cause pending checks to be returned due to non-sufficient funds. Unless the merchant detects the
chargeback in time to cover pending debits, a snowballing effect of penalties assessed could result.
Credit card companies require that for internet purchases, when the items are delivered, the cardholder
must sign in their name and other names like roommates or family members do not count. Without the
cardholder's own signature, it is not counted as delivered.
Address verification also provides protection by partially verifying the cardholder's address, however the
cardholder's signature is most important.
ATM reversal - An ATM deposit envelope is found to have less funds than represented (if any)
and a chargeback is made to correct the error. This could result due to a counting error or
intentional fraud by the account holder, or the envelope or its contents could have been lost or
stolen. If an overdraft results and is too huge or cannot be covered in a quite short period of time,
the bank will sue or press criminal charges, unless the account holder has been the victim of the
latter scenario, identity theft, or other fraud, and files a sworn police report.
Bank error correction - A bank error credits the account with more funds than intended and
makes a chargeback to correct the error. If an overdraft results and it cannot be covered in time,
the bank could sue or press criminal charges.
Direct deposit chargeback - A direct deposit is made to the wrong account holder or in a greater
amount than intended and a chargeback is made to correct the error.
Returned check deposit - The account holder deposits a check or money order and the deposited
item is returned due to NSF, a closed account, or being discovered to be counterfeit, stolen,
altered, or forged. This could occur due to a deposited item that he knows to be bad, or he could
be a victim of a bad check or a counterfeit check scam. If an overdraft results and it is too huge or
cannot be covered in a short period of time, the bank could sue or even press criminal charges.
References
PayPal user agreement. Section 4.5 lists chargeback info. Section 8 lists chargeback fees. [[1]]
WorldPay chargeback information. [[2]]
See also
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Chargeback insurance
Credit card
Credit card fraud
CVV2
Fraud
Merchant account
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