Overview

What is a chargeback?

A chargeback, also known as a reversal, occurs when a buyer asks his/her credit card issuing bank to reverse a transaction that has already cleared.

In a dispute over a chargeback, the decision is ultimately made by the credit card company and PayU cannot control the outcome.

Two common reasons for chargebacks are:

All sellers who accept credit card payments run the risk of being liable for chargebacks. Chargebacks are among the unfortunate costs of doing business. Many sellers factor this cost into their business risk model.

How Chargebacks work with PayU

 

  1. Buyer requests chargeback from credit card company.
  2. Buyer's credit card company notifies PayU’s merchant bank of the chargeback and debits funds from PayU.
  3. PayU places funds related to the chargeback on a temporary hold from seller's PayU account.
  4. PayU immediately email’s seller for additional information that can be used to dispute the chargeback.

What to expect:

What are some best practices for avoiding a chargeback?

Why do some chargebacks occur so long after payment has been received?

Certain laws and credit card issuer policies usually allow buyers to file chargebacks weeks or sometimes months after the initial transaction occurred. This period could be up to 180 days.

Chargebacks and Sellers

How does PayU notify a seller when a chargeback is filed against that seller?

When a buyer files a chargeback, the buyer's credit card company notifies PayU's merchant bank. Our merchant bank informs us of the chargeback, and we immediately email the seller. The seller will then be kept up to date by our Support Centre on the status of the charge back.

What happens to the seller's funds when a chargeback is received?

When a chargeback is filed is sets in motion a chain reaction. The buyer's bank pulls the funds from PayU's merchant bank. PayU's merchant bank pulls the funds from PayU. We, in turn, pull the funds from the Seller’s account. If the Seller’s account has insufficient funds to cover the chargeback a debit will be raised against the sellers account to cover the difference.

Note that if the dispute is found in favour of the seller, PayU will credit the Seller's account with the disputed funds.

Disputing Chargebacks

How can a seller recover funds when a chargeback occurs?

In many cases, when a chargeback occurs, the money that is subject to the chargeback is deducted from PayU. In turn, PayU places a temporary hold on the same amount in the seller's PayU balance (the funds are frozen).

The seller and PayU can work together to dispute the chargeback with the buyer's credit card company. While the chargeback is being disputed, PayU will debit the seller's account for the amount in question. If PayU and the seller ultimately win the chargeback dispute, the credit card company will reimburse PayU for the chargeback, and PayU will transfer the recovered funds back to the seller. Depending on the credit card company involved, the process may take up to 75 days.

In cases where the Seller has resolved a dispute amicably with the Buyer through PayU, the Seller will be protected against any chargeback the buyer's credit card company later files for that transaction.

To be covered, however, the seller must honour agreements made with the buyer during the dispute resolution process. And, if the chargeback comes in before the dispute is resolved the seller will not be covered.

What information can a seller provide to increase the chances of winning a chargeback dispute?

The following types of information can increase the chances of a chargeback dispute being ruled in favour of the seller:

PayU helps you through the chargeback process

PayU has a team of specialists who will work with you to make a case with the credit card issuing company. Here's how:

  1. Seller provides PayU with specifics of chargeback, including all records of transaction (for example, proof of posting).
  2. PayU specialists attempt to fight the chargeback on the seller's behalf in order to recover funds from the buyer's credit card company.
  3. If the credit card company finds in favour of the seller, the buyer is charged for the transaction and PayU returns the funds to the seller.