Card Chargebacks Explained: How to Dispute a Transaction on Visa, Mastercard, RuPay and Diners Club (with a US Filing Tutorial)

You don't request a chargeback from Visa or Mastercard, you dispute with your bank, which runs it through the network. Here's how chargebacks work across Visa, Mastercard, RuPay and Diners Club, a step-by-step US filing tutorial, and the statutory backstops in India, the US and the UK.
If a card payment was fraudulent, never delivered, double-charged, or for a subscription you cancelled, you can often claw the money back through a chargeback. But the single most useful thing to know is this: you do not request a chargeback from Visa, Mastercard, RuPay or Diners Club. You raise a dispute with your card-issuing bank, and the bank runs the chargeback through the network. Here is how it works across the major networks, how to actually file one in the United States, and how the law backs you up in India, the US and the UK.
On this page
The one rule to get right
The card networks set the rules, reason codes and deadlines for disputes, but they do not take complaints from cardholders. Only your issuing bank can start a chargeback. So every route below begins the same way: you contact your bank (or card issuer), not Visa or Mastercard.
Second, do not confuse two different things:
| Chargeback | Statutory refund right |
|---|---|
| A network mechanism (Visa, Mastercard, RuPay, Diners/Discover) for reversing a disputed transaction. Broad coverage: fraud, goods not received, double charges, cancelled subscriptions, "not as described". | A legal protection that sits on top, and is often stronger for fraud: RBI's liability rules in India, the Fair Credit Billing Act in the US, Section 75 in the UK. Your bank usually handles both, but you should know which one you are invoking. |
When you can use a chargeback
Typical grounds accepted across networks include:
- Fraud / unauthorised transaction you did not make or authorise
- Goods or services not received
- Double or incorrect charge (wrong amount, charged twice)
- Cancelled subscription or recurring charge that kept billing
- Refund or credit not processed after the merchant agreed to it
- Goods "not as described", counterfeit or defective
A chargeback is not a tool to dodge a purchase you simply regret. Disputing a legitimate charge ("friendly fraud") can get you penalised by the merchant or bank.
How to raise a dispute (any network)
- Try the merchant first. For non-fraud issues, ask the merchant for a refund and keep the written trail. Banks expect you to have attempted this, and it is often faster.
- Report fraud immediately. If the charge is unauthorised, do not wait. Reporting speed directly affects your liability and the chance of freezing the money.
- Raise the dispute with your bank. Use the bank's app, website, phone line, or branch. Pick the correct category (fraud / not received / double charge / cancelled / refund-not-processed / unrecognised).
- Provide evidence. Transaction reference, date and amount, the merchant name, receipts, the cancellation or refund email, and screenshots.
- Note the temporary credit and timeline. Banks often post a provisional ("shadow") credit while they investigate. The merchant gets a window to respond; a final decision follows.
Visa, Mastercard, RuPay, Diners compared
The consumer entry point is identical (your bank). The differences are in the back-end rails and some timelines.
| Network | Who you contact | Typical filing window | Back-end / notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa | Your issuing bank | 120 days from the transaction or expected delivery; a 540-day outer cap applies to future-delivery / services-not-rendered | Processed under Visa's dispute rules; stages run first chargeback → representment → arbitration. |
| Mastercard | Your issuing bank | 120 days standard; the same 540-day outer cap for future-delivery / services-not-rendered | Only the issuer can initiate; similar first-chargeback / second-presentment flow. |
| RuPay | Your issuing bank | Raise via the bank, typically within about 120 days | Cleared through NPCI's RuPay Global Clearing & Settlement System (RGCS); some reason codes carry fixed resolution windows. |
| Diners Club | Your issuing bank | Issuer-set, broadly comparable | Runs on the Discover Global Network in most of the world; in the US and Canada, Diners Club cards have run on the Mastercard network since 2004. A Request for Information / retrieval request may precede a formal chargeback. |
Exact reason codes live in each network's merchant-facing rulebook; as a cardholder you never touch them directly, your bank maps your complaint to the right code.
Tutorial: how to file a credit card chargeback in the United States
In the US, the Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA) gives you strong, written dispute rights for "billing errors", which include unauthorised charges, wrong amounts, charges for goods or services not delivered or not accepted, and failure to post credits. Follow these steps.
- Contact the merchant first (for non-fraud issues). Ask for a refund or correction and save the response. For outright fraud, skip to your issuer immediately.
- Notify your card issuer, fast, by phone. Call the number on the back of the card to flag the charge and, for fraud, freeze or reissue the card. A phone call is quick but does not, by itself, preserve your full legal rights.
- Send a written "billing error" notice within 60 days. To lock in your FCBA rights, mail a dispute letter to the issuer's billing inquiries address (often different from the payment address) within 60 calendar days of the statement on which the charge first appeared. Include your name, address, account number, and the date, amount and reason for the disputed charge, with copies (not originals) of any proof. The CFPB publishes a free sample dispute letter.
- Withhold payment on the disputed amount. While the issuer investigates, you may withhold payment on the disputed sum and any related finance charges. (Keep paying the rest of the bill.)
- Track the legal clock. The issuer must acknowledge your dispute within 30 days, and must resolve it within two billing cycles (no more than 90 days). A provisional credit is common while it is investigated.
- Escalate if needed. If the dispute is wrongly denied or ignored, file a complaint with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) at consumerfinance.gov/complaint, and consider your state Attorney General.
For unauthorised use, US federal law (the Truth in Lending Act) caps your liability at $50, and in practice the major networks' zero-liability policies usually waive even that, provided you report promptly.
The law behind you: India, US, UK
The chargeback rails are global, but the statutory protection layered on top differs by country, and for fraud it often beats a plain chargeback.
| Country | Key protection | What it gives you |
|---|---|---|
| India | RBI "Limiting Liability of Customers in Unauthorised Electronic Banking Transactions" (2017) | Report an unauthorised transaction within 3 working days for zero liability; bank credits the amount within 10 working days; complaint resolved within 90 days. Report fraud on 1930 / cybercrime.gov.in too (see our India reporting guide). |
| United States | Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA) | Written billing-error dispute within 60 days; issuer acknowledges in 30 days, resolves within 90. Separately, federal law (Truth in Lending Act) caps liability for unauthorised use at $50. |
| United Kingdom | Chargeback (voluntary scheme) + Section 75, Consumer Credit Act 1974 | For credit-card purchases roughly over £100 and up to £30,000, the card provider is jointly liable with the merchant, a statutory claim that can outlast chargeback time limits. |
(In the EU, the PSD2 rules similarly oblige banks to refund unauthorised payments, usually by the next business day, subject to fraud checks.)
Mistakes that kill a chargeback
- Missing the window. Most disputes must be filed within roughly 120 days (network) or 60 days (US FCBA written notice). Act early.
- Not trying the merchant first for non-fraud issues, banks may bounce it back.
- No evidence. A dispute without receipts, the cancellation email, or screenshots is easy for the merchant to reverse.
- Disputing a charge you actually made ("friendly fraud") can cost you the goods and the goodwill, and may be treated as abuse.
- Going quiet. Respond to the bank's follow-ups; an unanswered query can close the case against you.
Frequently asked questions
Can I call Visa or Mastercard directly? No. Only your issuing bank can file a chargeback; the networks do not handle cardholder complaints.
Chargeback or statutory dispute, which should I use? For fraud, lean on the statutory route (RBI rules in India, FCBA in the US, Section 75 in the UK), which is often stronger. For merchant issues like non-delivery, a chargeback is the usual path. Your bank typically processes both.
How long does it take? Often 60 to 90 days for a final decision, with a provisional credit earlier. Statutory deadlines (US: 90 days; India: 90 days) cap the wait.
Does disputing hurt my credit? Filing a legitimate dispute does not; under the FCBA you may withhold the disputed amount during investigation without it being treated as delinquent.
What if my bank refuses? Escalate, in the US to the CFPB; in India to the bank's grievance cell and the RBI Ombudsman; in the UK to the Financial Ombudsman Service.
Sources: Visa and Mastercard dispute/chargeback guidance (usa.visa.com, mastercard.us); National Payments Corporation of India, RuPay chargeback (npci.org.in); Diners Club / Discover dispute process (dinersclub.com); Reserve Bank of India, "Customer Protection – Limiting Liability of Customers in Unauthorised Electronic Banking Transactions" (2017); US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Federal Trade Commission on the Fair Credit Billing Act (consumerfinance.gov, consumer.ftc.gov); UK Section 75, Consumer Credit Act 1974. This article is general information, not legal advice; check your card issuer's current terms and the latest rules, which can change.
If you have lost money to a scam or an unauthorised charge, you are not alone — see our country-by-country guide to reporting cybercrime and recovering your money.