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What Is A Credit Card Chargeback?

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Conteúdo fornecido por Chirag. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Chirag ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

As a user of credit cards or other banking products, your ability to issue a chargeback is one of the most important tools you have to resolve billing disputes and undo fraud. But the term may be foreign to you if you've never had to do it. Here's what you need to know.

Click on the link to know more about credit card chargeback: https://anynote.co/post/40894_in-this-post-you-will-know-about-credit-card-chargeback-in-a-simple-way-chargeba.html

What Is a Chargeback?

A chargeback is an action taken by a bank to reverse electronic payments. It involves reversing a payment and triggering a dispute resolution process. Generally, chargebacks occur between a merchant and a credit card issuing bank or a consumer. However chargebacks are sometimes issued against consumers, for example in the case of an erroneous ATM deposit. Usually chargebacks are used to reverse a payment in the case of a billing error, unauthorized credit card use or failure to deliver a product or service.

Often this term is used by savvy credit card issuers to refer to the entire process of disputing a credit card charge, receiving an account credit and having the disputed amount taken back from the merchant.

When Should You Use a Chargeback?

The Federal Trade Commission and other regulatory bodies mandate a fair amount of protection to consumers using credit cards. Among other protections, you have the right to accurate billing, protection from unauthorized charges and the right to dispute charges for goods or services that are different than described. In addition to regulatory protections, your bank, credit card issuer or card association may provide you with additional rights.

Most often, chargebacks are issued for one of the following reasons:

  • Fraud or unauthorized use—Someone uses your card without your authorization to purchase goods or services.
  • Goods or services were not as described—Goods or services provided were materially different than they were described or agreed to.
  • Goods or services not delivered—You paid for something, but never received it or you paid for a service that was never provided.
  • Return credit not processed—You returned an item or canceled a service within a merchant's return policy and never received credit for the return.
  • A recurring billing was not stopped—A subscription service continued to be billed after you canceled it.
  • Incorrect amount—The amount charged was incorrect.

Generally, chargeback abilities are limited to 120 days from the date of purchase and are not meant as a way to protect against loss, damage or theft after a product has been delivered or as an extended return protection or warranty benefit.

How Do You Submit a Chargeback?

To dispute a charge and submit a chargeback, you must identify the transaction in question and work with your credit card issuer to initiate the process. Regardless of how you initiate your chargeback request, your bank will walk you through providing the information they require.

  continue reading

13 episódios

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iconCompartilhar
 
Manage episode 335749927 series 3372577
Conteúdo fornecido por Chirag. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Chirag ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

As a user of credit cards or other banking products, your ability to issue a chargeback is one of the most important tools you have to resolve billing disputes and undo fraud. But the term may be foreign to you if you've never had to do it. Here's what you need to know.

Click on the link to know more about credit card chargeback: https://anynote.co/post/40894_in-this-post-you-will-know-about-credit-card-chargeback-in-a-simple-way-chargeba.html

What Is a Chargeback?

A chargeback is an action taken by a bank to reverse electronic payments. It involves reversing a payment and triggering a dispute resolution process. Generally, chargebacks occur between a merchant and a credit card issuing bank or a consumer. However chargebacks are sometimes issued against consumers, for example in the case of an erroneous ATM deposit. Usually chargebacks are used to reverse a payment in the case of a billing error, unauthorized credit card use or failure to deliver a product or service.

Often this term is used by savvy credit card issuers to refer to the entire process of disputing a credit card charge, receiving an account credit and having the disputed amount taken back from the merchant.

When Should You Use a Chargeback?

The Federal Trade Commission and other regulatory bodies mandate a fair amount of protection to consumers using credit cards. Among other protections, you have the right to accurate billing, protection from unauthorized charges and the right to dispute charges for goods or services that are different than described. In addition to regulatory protections, your bank, credit card issuer or card association may provide you with additional rights.

Most often, chargebacks are issued for one of the following reasons:

  • Fraud or unauthorized use—Someone uses your card without your authorization to purchase goods or services.
  • Goods or services were not as described—Goods or services provided were materially different than they were described or agreed to.
  • Goods or services not delivered—You paid for something, but never received it or you paid for a service that was never provided.
  • Return credit not processed—You returned an item or canceled a service within a merchant's return policy and never received credit for the return.
  • A recurring billing was not stopped—A subscription service continued to be billed after you canceled it.
  • Incorrect amount—The amount charged was incorrect.

Generally, chargeback abilities are limited to 120 days from the date of purchase and are not meant as a way to protect against loss, damage or theft after a product has been delivered or as an extended return protection or warranty benefit.

How Do You Submit a Chargeback?

To dispute a charge and submit a chargeback, you must identify the transaction in question and work with your credit card issuer to initiate the process. Regardless of how you initiate your chargeback request, your bank will walk you through providing the information they require.

  continue reading

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