Calculate the true cost of a chargeback: lost product, processing fee, chargeback fee, and operational cost. See how chargebacks impact your bottom line.
A chargeback costs far more than just the refunded transaction amount. When a customer disputes a charge, you lose the product (it's rarely returned), the payment processor charges a $15–$100 chargeback fee, you lose the original processing fee, and your team spends time managing the dispute. The true cost of a chargeback is typically 2–3× the transaction amount.
This calculator tallies all the costs associated with a chargeback: the refunded amount, product cost, chargeback fee, original processing fee, and estimated operational cost. It shows the true cost per chargeback and the monthly impact based on your chargeback rate.
Understanding the full cost of chargebacks helps justify investment in fraud prevention tools and dispute management systems. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.
Most sellers only think about the refunded amount, but the real cost includes the product, fees, and labor. This calculator reveals the true cost — often 2.5× the transaction amount. Use it to justify investing in chargeback prevention and optimize your dispute response strategy. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
Chargeback Cost = Transaction Amount + Product Cost + Chargeback Fee + Processing Fee + Operational Cost Cost Multiplier = Total Cost / Transaction Amount Monthly Chargebacks = Monthly Transactions × Chargeback Rate% Monthly Impact = Monthly Chargebacks × Total Cost Per Chargeback
Result: True Cost: $101.75 | Multiplier: 2.04× | Monthly Impact: $1,017.50
Transaction: $50 refunded. Product: $15 lost (not returned). Chargeback fee: $25. Processing fee: $1.75 (non-refundable). Ops cost: $10. Total: $101.75, which is 2.04× the $50 transaction. With 1,000 monthly transactions and 1% chargeback rate = 10 chargebacks/month = $1,017.50 monthly loss.
Research by the Merchant Risk Council shows that the average chargeback costs 2.40× the transaction amount when all costs are included. For a $50 chargeback, the merchant loses approximately $120. This includes the refunded amount, product cost, chargeback fee, processing fee, operational time, and increased processing rates from higher chargeback ratios.
Fraud prevention tools cost $0.05–0.50 per transaction (Signifyd, Riskified, Kount). If your average chargeback costs $100 and you process 10,000 transactions/month, reducing chargebacks from 1% to 0.3% saves 70 chargebacks = $7,000/month. The prevention tool at $0.10/transaction costs $1,000/month. ROI: 600%.
Visa's VDMP triggers at 100 chargebacks AND 0.9% rate in a month. Mastercard's ECP triggers at 100 chargebacks AND 1% rate. Merchants in these programs face monthly fines ($25K–$100K), increased monitoring fees, and potential account termination. Prevention is critical.
A chargeback occurs when a customer disputes a charge with their bank or credit card company. The bank reverses the transaction, taking money from the merchant's account and returning it to the customer. The merchant must then prove the charge was legitimate or accept the loss.
The chargeback fee from processors ranges from $15 (Stripe) to $25–$100 (traditional processors). But the total cost includes the refunded amount, lost product, original processing fee, and operational time. The true cost is typically 2–3× the transaction amount.
Visa and Mastercard consider 0.9–1% chargebacks (of total transactions) as the threshold for monitoring programs. Best-in-class merchants maintain rates below 0.3%. Rates above 1.8% can result in account termination. Monitor your rate monthly and take action above 0.5%.
Friendly fraud (or first-party fraud) occurs when a legitimate customer makes a purchase and then disputes the charge with their bank, claiming they didn't make it or didn't receive it. It accounts for 60–80% of all chargebacks. Delivery confirmation and signed receipts help fight these disputes.
Yes, merchants win 20–40% of disputed chargebacks on average. Success requires compelling evidence: delivery confirmation, customer communication, IP address matching, signed receipts, and proof that the product/service was as described. Professional chargeback management services can improve win rates to 50–60%.
Best practices: Use clear billing descriptors, send immediate confirmation and tracking, have an easy refund process (customers refund instead of disputing), use fraud detection tools, implement 3D Secure, provide responsive customer service, and clearly describe products to prevent disappointment disputes. A layered prevention approach that combines technology, communication, and customer service can reduce chargeback rates by 40–70% and keep your account well within card network thresholds.