Chargebacks cost merchants $4.61 for every $1 disputed — and for high-risk businesses, the stakes are even higher. A chargeback ratio above 1% can trigger processor monitoring programmes, increased fees, and ultimately account termination. This guide covers everything you need to prevent chargebacks before they happen, dispute them when they do, and protect your processing relationships long-term.

What Is a Chargeback?
A chargeback is a forced transaction reversal initiated by a cardholder’s bank. When a customer disputes a charge, the bank retrieves the funds from the merchant’s account — regardless of whether the purchase was legitimate. The merchant then has a narrow window to submit evidence (representment) to contest the reversal. Losing a chargeback means losing both the transaction value and the associated fees.
The 5 Types of Chargebacks High-Risk Merchants Face
1. Friendly Fraud
A legitimate transaction disputed by the cardholder. Representing 36% of all reported fraud in 2025, friendly fraud occurs when customers dispute valid purchases rather than requesting a refund. Prevention requires strong authentication records and post-purchase engagement documentation.
2. Criminal Card Fraud
A stolen or compromised card is used to make a purchase. 3DS2 authentication and AI-driven fraud scoring dramatically reduce this category by shifting liability to the issuing bank for authenticated transactions.
3. Merchant Error
Duplicate billing, incorrect amounts, or unprocessed refunds. Entirely preventable through billing accuracy controls and refund confirmation workflows.
4. Subscription Confusion
Cardholders dispute automatic renewal charges they don’t recognise. Mitigated by pre-billing reminder emails, clear billing descriptors, and one-click cancellation.
5. Delivery & Quality Disputes
Customer claims non-delivery or defective goods. Prevented by shipment tracking, delivery confirmation, and proactive customer service communication.
Chargeback Thresholds: What Ratios Matter in 2026
Visa’s VAMP programme (launched October 2025) monitors a combined TC40 fraud + TC15 dispute ratio against total settled transactions. The enforcement threshold is 0.9%. Mastercard’s BRAM programme runs parallel monitoring. Many acquirers apply internal early-warning thresholds as low as 0.4%–0.5%. Merchants should target below 0.3% for maximum account stability.
Chargeback Prevention Checklist
- Implement 3DS2 authentication on all card-not-present transactions
- Use pre-dispute alert services (Ethoca, Verifi) to intercept before formal filing
- Ensure billing descriptor matches the brand name customers recognise
- Send renewal reminder emails 3–5 days before subscription billing
- Maintain delivery tracking and confirmation records for all orders
- Keep customer service response times under 24 hours
- Monitor TC40 fraud signals alongside formal chargeback counts
How to Win Chargeback Representment
Under Visa’s Compelling Evidence 3.0 standard, merchants can contest friendly fraud chargebacks by submitting proof that the cardholder authorised the transaction, received the goods or service, and engaged post-purchase. Retain authentication logs, delivery confirmations, and customer communications indexed by transaction ID for rapid retrieval.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I reduce chargebacks in the adult industry?
Adult content merchants reduce chargebacks by implementing 3DS2 authentication, using clear and recognisable billing descriptors (rather than generic company names), sending pre-billing reminders for subscription charges, and integrating pre-dispute alert tools like Ethoca or Verifi. Maintaining a chargeback ratio below 0.5% is critical for account retention in adult payment processing.
What is the chargeback ratio limit for high-risk merchant accounts?
Most high-risk acquirers apply an internal threshold of 0.5%–0.75%. Visa’s VAMP programme enforces a 0.9% combined ratio at the card-network level. Merchants operating above 1% face monitoring programmes, fines, and potential account termination.
