If you’ve ever dealt with chargeback accounting, you know it’s no walk in the park. It’s complex, time-consuming, and expensive—and more often than not, it disadvantages merchants.
But you don’t have a choice. Chargebacks are a legal requirement under the U.S. Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z), which gives consumers the right to dispute unauthorized or unfair transactions (like fraudulent purchases or late deliveries).
When a cardholder files a chargeback, the banks get involved. If the dispute is approved, the customer gets their money back, and the merchant takes the hit, often losing much more than the original sale.
That’s not just bad for your bottom line. It can also create significant headaches for your accounting team. If you cross their chargeback thresholds, poor chargeback accounting can even get you flagged by the card networks.
The good news is that with the right tools and processes, you can stay in control, reduce risk, and make the whole process much easier for your team.
Unlike standard deposits, chargebacks show up unpredictably. You might get hit with a bunch in one week and nothing for the next month. That inconsistency makes it challenging to track and even easier to mess up the accounting.
Resolving a single chargeback can take weeks or months. Some even spill over into a new fiscal year, which adds to the confusion when tax season rolls around.
Even if you win, there are still processing fees, potential legal costs, and shipping losses to record. It all adds up, and you must keep track of everything.
Not only do chargebacks take time and cost money, but there’s no universal system for handling them. Every bank, processor, and accounting software platform has its way of logging disputes.
To make things even trickier, the way you record chargebacks depends on whether your business uses cash-basis or accrual accounting:
So yeah, it’s a lot to keep straight.
Even if your accounting is buttoned up, your provider’s reporting can throw a wrench in the works.
Sometimes, providers even hold back fees in reserve funds, which can take months to get back if you remember to chase them down.
Pro tip: Always account for chargeback fees as soon as a customer files, whether the dispute is approved or not. Most merchants categorize these under operating expenses or bank fees. If you deal with chargebacks often, consider creating a separate sub-account for dispute-related costs.
There’s a better way to manage this. The right chargeback management solution can streamline the process, reduce errors, and save time across your accounting and ops teams.
Here’s what to look for:
Instead of logging into multiple portals to track disputes, a dashboard gives you one place to view everything. With API integrations to your payment providers and gateways, you can:
You can’t fix what you don’t understand. Analytics tools help you:
The right tool turns raw data into clear, actionable reports for your accounting and fraud teams.
End-of-month summaries won’t cut it. Real-time reporting helps you:
A suitable solution turns real-time chargeback data into digestible reports that anyone can understand, even non-accountants.
MidMetrics offers all of the above, plus support and guidance to help you make the most of it.
With our platform, you get:
Trying to cobble this together from different vendors will cost more and likely not integrate as smoothly.
We planned MidMetrics to make even the most complex chargeback situations manageable - for your accounting team, ops leads, and bottom line.
If you're serious about staying in control, reducing risk, and making the whole process much easier for your team, we're here to help.