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Chargeback Prevention: A Complete Guide for Small Business Merchants

Chargeback Prevention: A Complete Guide for Small Business Merchants Chargebacks cost merchants more than the transaction value. Beyond the refunded amount, you typically pay a chargeback fee $15-100 per dispute, risk e

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Chargeback Prevention: A Complete Guide for Small Business Merchants

Chargeback Prevention: A Complete Guide for Small Business Merchants

Chargebacks cost merchants more than the transaction value. Beyond the refunded amount, you typically pay a chargeback fee ($15-100 per dispute), risk elevated processor rates if your ratio exceeds thresholds, and spend time on the dispute process. Prevention is far cheaper than response.

Why Chargebacks Happen

Understanding the cause determines the prevention strategy:

Friendly fraud — The customer received the product or service but disputes the charge anyway, claiming non-receipt, non-authorization, or quality issues. Estimates suggest 60-80% of chargebacks are friendly fraud.

True fraud — A stolen card was used and the legitimate cardholder disputes the charge.

Processing errors — Duplicate charges, wrong amounts, or billing a cancelled subscription.

Customer service failures — The merchant failed to respond to a legitimate refund request, so the customer escalated to their bank.

Prevention by Cause

For friendly fraud:

  • Use clear billing descriptors (the name that appears on bank statements). Unclear descriptors cause customers to report charges they do not recognize.
  • Send order confirmation and shipping notifications with tracking.
  • Make your return and refund policy easy to find and frictionless to use.
  • Maintain records of delivery confirmation, signed receipts, IP logs, and customer communication.
  • Respond to refund requests quickly — a processed refund cannot become a chargeback.

For true fraud:

  • Require CVV verification and address verification (AVS)
  • Enable 3D Secure (Verified by Visa / Mastercard SecureCode) for online transactions
  • Set transaction velocity limits to flag unusual purchase patterns
  • Manually review high-value orders with mismatched shipping and billing addresses

For processing errors:

  • Audit your billing logic regularly
  • Send clear receipts showing exactly what was charged
  • Cancel subscriptions promptly when requested

Responding to Chargebacks You Receive

When you receive a chargeback notice, you have a narrow window (typically 7-30 days depending on processor) to respond. Submit:

  • Order confirmation with timestamp and IP address
  • Shipping confirmation with tracking showing delivery
  • Signed receipt (for card-present transactions)
  • Any communication with the customer about the transaction
  • Your terms of service or refund policy

Win rates vary by reason code. Friendly fraud disputes with strong evidence are winnable; legitimate fraud disputes generally are not.

Your Chargeback Ratio

Processors monitor chargeback ratios (chargebacks / total transactions). Visa flags merchants above 0.9%; Mastercard flags above 1.0%. Exceeding these thresholds triggers enhanced monitoring programs with additional fees and potential account termination. Prevention is existential at scale.

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