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A Chargeback refers to the actual process of the cardholder attempting to retrieve their funds from the disputed transaction.

A Chargeback refers to a customer disputing a charge with their credit card issuer or bank. Chargebacks can happen for various reasons, such as unauthorized transactions, items or services not received, or general dissatisfaction with that product or service. In a chargeback, the cardholder contacts their financial institution to initiate the process of reversing the transaction. The funds from the transaction are taken from the Merchant’s account and returned to the cardholder.

Chargeback Time Limitations

Both chargebacks that have been manually requested by cardholders to their issuers and chargebacks automatically issued when preset risk, fraud, or other security parameters, configured by banks or issuers, have been met:

Chargeback Type

Time Limitations

Manual Cardholder-Initated

Open for up to 270 days from the original date of the transaction.

  • This can extend to up to 540 days for payment of future delivery of goods or services.

Automated Issuer-Initiated

Open with an unlimited timetable.

Chargeback Cycles

From the merchant's perspective there are just three stages:

Chargeback Cycle

Description

Retrieval

The initial request from the Issuer to the Merchant for transaction information.

Chargeback

The process of each individual Dispute action from First Chargeback to Arbitration.

Resolution

The final decision made by the Issuer for the Merchant or Cardholder to receive full, partial or no credit.

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