How to Dispute a Credit Card Transaction: Chargeback, RBI Ombudsman, and Unauthorised Charges in 2026
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How to Dispute a Credit Card Transaction: Chargeback, RBI Ombudsman, and Unauthorised Charges in 2026

How to Dispute a Credit Card Transaction — Chargeback Process Step-by-Step

Last verified: April 2026, against RBI’s Customer Liability Framework, RuPay/Visa/Mastercard chargeback procedures, and major issuer dispute resolution practices.

If a fraudulent or wrong charge appears on your credit card statement, you have the right to dispute it via the chargeback mechanism — backed by RBI’s Customer Liability Framework. The window is tight: report within 3 working days for full protection. This guide walks through the complete dispute process, what’s recoverable, and how to maximise resolution chances.

What you can dispute

Dispute type Examples Outcome
Fraudulent transaction Card used without your knowledge / authorisation Full refund (subject to RBI limits)
Merchandise not received Online order paid for but never delivered Refund after merchant investigation
Defective / not as described Product received but defective or different from order Refund after evidence submission
Duplicate charges Same transaction charged twice Refund of duplicate within 30 days
Cancelled subscription / unauthorised renewal OTT auto-renewed despite cancellation Refund + stop further auto-debits
Incorrect amount ₹1,000 booking charged as ₹10,000 Refund of difference
EMI conversion error Conversion declined / incorrect rate applied Reversal + correction

The 3-working-day rule (RBI Customer Liability Framework)

RBI’s Customer Liability Framework (2017, amended 2024) protects cardholders:

  • Reported within 3 working days: Zero liability — full refund
  • Reported between 4-7 working days: Limited liability — capped per RBI tier (₹10,000 for credit cards, ₹25,000 for HNW segments)
  • Reported after 7 working days: Unlimited liability up to transaction value

The clock starts when the unauthorised transaction is communicated to you (statement, SMS alert, app notification). Promptness is critical.

Step 1 — Identify the disputed transaction immediately

Watch for transaction alerts:

  • SMS / email alerts from issuer (enable instant alerts on all transactions)
  • App push notifications
  • Statement review (don’t wait — review weekly)

If something looks off, act within 24 hours.

Step 2 — Block the card immediately (if fraud suspected)

  1. Use issuer app or call helpline
  2. Block card temporarily or permanently (your choice — temporary if you’re investigating)
  3. Request new card issuance
  4. Get a “block reference number” from the call

Blocking ASAP prevents further unauthorised use and strengthens your dispute case.

Step 3 — File the dispute / chargeback

Three routes:

Route 1 — Issuer app or website

Most banks have “Raise Dispute” feature in app:

  1. Login to app
  2. Navigate to “Disputes” or “Transaction Issues”
  3. Select disputed transaction
  4. Choose dispute reason from menu
  5. Upload supporting evidence (chat screenshots, order confirmation, refund denial emails)
  6. Submit; receive dispute reference number

Route 2 — Call customer service

Phone-based dispute filing. Useful when the app option isn’t clear or transaction predates app records. Get reference number on call.

Route 3 — Branch visit (rare these days)

Submit written dispute form at any branch. Useful for complex cases requiring documentation.

Step 4 — Provide supporting evidence

What helps your case:

  • FIR copy (mandatory for fraud)
  • Email/SMS communication with merchant
  • Order confirmation showing different amount/product
  • Cancellation request emails (for subscription disputes)
  • Photographs of defective products
  • Bank statement showing transaction
  • Customer service call records / transcripts

Document everything before disputing. Lack of evidence is the #1 reason chargebacks fail.

Step 5 — Wait for resolution (typically 30-60 days)

  1. Day 1-7: Bank acknowledges dispute, opens investigation. Issues temporary credit (provisional reversal of disputed amount) on most fraud claims.
  2. Day 7-30: Bank investigates with merchant via card network (Visa/Mastercard/Amex chargeback process).
  3. Day 30-60: Merchant responds with evidence (or doesn’t). Bank decides.
  4. Day 60+: Final resolution. Permanent credit (favour cardholder) or reversal (favour merchant).

If decision goes against you, escalate to:

  • Issuer’s Banking Ombudsman
  • RBI Banking Ombudsman
  • Consumer Forum (last resort)

The chargeback network mechanics

Behind the scenes, your dispute triggers a chargeback through Visa/Mastercard/Amex’s network:

  1. You file dispute → issuer raises chargeback to network
  2. Network notifies merchant’s acquirer bank
  3. Merchant has 30-90 days to respond with evidence (proof of delivery, signature, IP logs)
  4. If merchant doesn’t respond or evidence is weak: chargeback wins (you keep the credit)
  5. If merchant evidence is strong: chargeback fails (credit reversed)
  6. You can appeal twice via “second chargeback” process

Most legitimate disputes succeed. Fraud disputes rarely fail (merchant has no legitimate proof). Merchandise/quality disputes succeed ~60-70% of the time depending on evidence.

What you cannot dispute

  1. Authorised transactions you regret. “I bought this and don’t want it” — that’s the merchant’s return policy, not chargeback.
  2. Personal disputes with merchant unrelated to card use. Service quality complaints typically resolved with merchant directly.
  3. Authorised transactions where you forgot to cancel auto-debit before renewal. Some success rate, but harder to prove “unauthorised.”
  4. Late payment fees / interest charges. These are issuer charges, not merchant. Negotiate directly with issuer for waiver.

If your dispute is denied

  1. Request written denial reason from issuer — they must provide.
  2. Submit additional evidence if available; reopen dispute.
  3. Escalate to Banking Ombudsman at issuer (each bank has a Principal Nodal Officer).
  4. RBI Ombudsman if not resolved by issuer within 30 days. File at cms.rbi.org.in.
  5. Consumer Forum for amounts above ₹20K with documented escalation history.

Linked deep-dives

FAQs

How long do I have to dispute a credit card transaction?

RBI Customer Liability Framework: zero liability within 3 working days. Limited liability 4-7 days. After 7 days, full liability up to transaction amount. File ASAP — preferably within 24 hours of noticing.

Will I get my money back during dispute?

Most issuers issue temporary / provisional credit within 7 working days for fraud disputes. The credit becomes permanent if dispute succeeds, reversed if dispute fails.

Do I need an FIR for credit card dispute?

For fraud / unauthorised use disputes — yes, FIR is required as evidence. For merchandise / quality disputes — no FIR needed, just merchant communication evidence.

Can I dispute international credit card transactions?

Yes — same process applies. International chargebacks may take longer (60-90 days vs 30-60 domestic) due to cross-border merchant communication.

What if the merchant has a “no refund” policy?

Merchant policies don’t override your chargeback rights. RBI rules + card network rules govern dispute outcomes, not merchant T&C. Even “non-refundable” services are disputable if there’s legitimate fraud or non-delivery grounds.

Will disputing hurt my CIBIL?

No — disputes themselves don’t impact CIBIL. Pending disputes show as “under investigation” temporarily; resolution clears it.

Sources & references

  • RBI Customer Liability Framework (2017, amended 2024)
  • RBI Master Direction on Credit Card and Debit Card Issuance and Conduct
  • Visa, Mastercard, Amex chargeback rules (operating regulations)
  • Banking Ombudsman Scheme 2006 (and subsequent amendments)

Last verified: April 2026. Dispute and chargeback procedures evolve with RBI and network rule revisions; verify with issuer for specific cases.

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