<b>Q: A buyer did a chargeback instead of asking for a refund. Why does that hurt my account more?</b>
A: Because a chargeback isn't just a reversed sale — it's a dispute filed with the card network, and it leaves a mark on the merchant that a plain refund never does.
When a customer asks the advertiser directly for a refund, the money goes back quietly. Your commission reverses, and that's the end of it.
A chargeback is different. The buyer told their bank 'I didn't authorize this' or 'this wasn't as described.' That counts against the advertiser's <b>chargeback ratio</b> — the percentage of transactions disputed. Card networks penalize merchants above roughly 0.9-1%, with fines and program enrollment.
So advertisers watch which traffic sources produce chargebacks, not just refunds. A source with a high dispute rate signals buyer confusion, misleading creatives, or fraud — and they'll cap or drop it even if gross volume looks good.
If your traffic generates disputes, look at your funnel: unclear billing descriptors, hidden trial-to-subscription flips, and aggressive pre-sell pages are the usual culprits.
Short version: refunds reverse a sale; chargebacks damage the merchant's standing with the banks. Fix the funnel that confuses buyers.
Still stuck? Drop your case in the comments.
Clean Traffic Desk
@CleanTrafficDesk
<b>Q: A buyer did a chargeback instead of asking for a refund. Why does that hurt my account more?</b>
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