Published: April 30, 2025 | Updated June 8, 2026
The number of chargebacks globally is expected to grow 37% from 2025 to 2029, reaching 359 million transactions annually, according to Mastercard’s 2026 research with Datos Insights.
As chargebacks rise worldwide, merchants and issuers will see increases in two types of costs:
The most effective way to reduce these costs is to catch disputes earlier in the process, before they escalate into formal chargebacks. Both merchants and issuers need the right combination of insights and tools to resolve cases quickly and prevent escalation.
So, as chargebacks continue to grow, what is the true cost of a chargeback for businesses today?
A chargeback typically follows these steps:
Resolving disputes early in this process helps merchants and financial institutions avoid unnecessary costs and reduce operational strain.
Several factors contribute to the total cost of a chargeback. Although some of them are not easy to track, the chargeback benchmark data helps quantify the impact merchants and issuers face overall.
While the banks and FIs that issue cards sometimes absorb the chargeback amount, their biggest costs are operational. Handling a high volume of disputes puts a strain on the limited time and resources customer service and back-office fraud teams have available.
According to our 2025 global chargebacks outlook with Datos Insights:
FIs in the United States (U.S.) must hire one full-time employee (FTE) on average for every $13,000-$14,000 of disputes annually.
For most FIs in the U.S., that works out to more than 200 back-office staff, representing millions of dollars in personnel costs every year. And each disputed transaction costs those FIs $9.08 to $10.32 to process.
With an estimated 286 million chargebacks projected globally for 2026, this adds up to billions of dollars in total expenditures across FIs each year.
When a merchant receives a chargeback, they're not only faced with the cost of managing the dispute, but they also may absorb the cost of the associated merchandise or service, if it was already provided. So, for merchants, the cost of a chargeback depends on the chargeback amount.
Those costs can vary significantly depending on factors like industry, market and company size. Here is a breakdown based on the 2025 research with Datos Insights:
Average chargeback amount by industry (2025) | |
Industry | Average chargeback amount |
Travel and hospitality | $120 |
High-risk categories | $99 |
Retail | $84 |
Digital goods | $77 |
Subscription services | $69 |
However, merchants also incur operational costs related to chargebacks, including:
Together, these costs often exceed the total value of the item being disputed, according to the Javelin white paper. This imbalance makes chargeback costs especially burdensome.
All in, the financial impact of global chargebacks is expected to grow from $36.9 billion in 2026 to $46.1 billion in 2029, according to Datos Insights. This marks more than a 20% increase over just three years. The rise in chargebacks is driven by a few key trends, including:
These trends affect all corners of the globe. Today, North America leads in total chargeback volume — but other regions are quickly catching up.
How chargeback numbers are projected to increase across regions | ||
Region | Projected chargebacks in 2029 | Projected increase in chargebacks, 2026-29 |
North America | 141.1 million | ↑ 17% |
Latin America | 90.2 million | ↑ 19% |
Asia Pacific | 62.5 million | ↑ 50% |
Middle East and Africa | 36.1 million | ↑ 49% |
Europe | 29.2 million | ↑ 22% |
Together, these insights underscore what’s at stake for businesses that fail to implement best practices and adopt cutting-edge technologies to support the chargeback process.
To keep chargeback costs in check, merchants and issuers need tools that reduce both the volume of disputes and the effort required to handle the ones that still occur. The most effective platforms do this by improving speed, data quality and coordination across the dispute lifecycle.
Even when a dispute can’t be avoided, speeding up resolution reduces costs. The longer a case stays open, the more time both sides spend on repeat customer outreach, manual review and back-and-forth.
To shorten timelines, merchants and issuers need three core capabilities:
By accelerating dispute resolution, merchants and FIs can better manage operational costs, reducing the overall cost of chargebacks.
Many disputes arise from simple purchase confusion. For example, if a customer transacts through a third-party app, instead of directly with a merchant, they may not recognize the name in their statement and assume the transaction is fraudulent.
According to our 2026 research with Datos Insights, 48% of consumers have mistakenly disputed a legitimate charge.
In those cases, the fastest path to cost control is preventing the dispute from being filed at all.
Issuers can reduce confusion by providing context directly within their banking apps. That could include clear merchant names and logos, geolocation data or detailed digital receipts.
This conserves both FIs’ and merchants’ resources by helping them avoid handling (and often paying for) chargeback disputes that would otherwise be legitimate transactions.
Subscription merchants often face a high volume of chargebacks due to customers having trouble managing their recurring payments. These small-dollar disputes carry disproportionate operational costs: The initial dispute fee may outweigh the cost of the subscription service provided, resulting in an immediate financial loss.
An accidental chargeback can also trigger fraud blocks that keep those customers from resubscribing, resulting in poor customer experience and lost customer lifetime value (CLV) — which is particularly painful given that subscription companies often must spend heavily to acquire those customers in the first place.
Tools that connect dispute prevention to self-serve subscription controls (pause, cancel, change plan, update billing) can reduce avoidable disputes at the source and protect CLV.
Addressing rising chargebacks demands close collaboration between merchants and issuers.
Automated tools can streamline communication and boost transparency, ensuring all parties receive the information they need — from customers reviewing their purchases in a banking app to back-office employees managing disputes.
These solutions can ease costs and streamline operations for merchants and FIs alike, while also offering customers the types of frictionless purchase experiences that ensure satisfaction every time.
Learn how Mastercard can help you better track, manage and resolve chargebacks throughout the payments lifecycle to improve the purchase experience and minimize disputes.
On average, merchants in the U.S pay $82 in internal costs and $46 in third-party fees per chargeback, not including the cost of lost goods or services.
Financial institutions in the U.S. spend $9.08 to $10.32 per dispute on average, driven primarily by operational and staffing costs.
Chargeback costs fall into two categories:
Direct costs: Fees and refunded transaction amounts
Indirect costs: Operational expenses like staffing, technology and dispute management services
Businesses can reduce costs by:
Implementing real-time alerts to allow merchants to stop a shipment or make a refund before a dispute becomes a chargeback.
Improving transaction transparency to reduce disputes tied to purchase confusion.
Simplifying subscription management to give customers more visibility and control while protecting lifetime value.
Together, these approaches help prevent disputes at the source and reduce operational burden.