Chargebacks remain one of the most persistent risks in European ecommerce. Every dispute costs more than the transaction itself, eating into margins through lost revenue, fees, and operational strain. For merchants, the real risk is not only the financial loss but also the reputational impact and the potential for penalties if chargeback ratios rise too high.
In 2026, European chargeback dynamics are being reshaped by regulation, consumer protection, and new payment methods. Merchants need to understand the rules, identify the risks, and apply practical strategies to minimize disputes. This article explores the key drivers of chargebacks in Europe, the rules that govern them, and how merchants can protect their revenue.
A chargeback occurs when a cardholder disputes a transaction with their bank or card issuer. The bank reverses the payment, and the merchant must either provide compelling evidence to contest it or absorb the loss.
Chargebacks differ from refunds in two ways:
Visa, Mastercard, and American Express each define their own chargeback codes and timelines. These rules apply across Europe, but implementation may differ depending on local acquiring banks. Merchants that operate across borders must stay aware of multiple sets of requirements.
The revised Payment Services Directive introduced Strong Customer Authentication (SCA), designed to reduce fraud-related disputes. While SCA helps prevent unauthorized transactions, it has not eliminated chargebacks. Merchants must still prove compliance with SCA exemptions during disputes.
On average, ecommerce chargeback rates in Europe remain below 1%, but certain verticals (such as travel, digital goods, and marketplaces) regularly exceed this threshold. Card networks monitor ratios closely, and merchants that cross tolerance levels face fines or higher processing fees.
Data from 50 payment and merchant statistics shaping Europe in 2025 shows that fraud-related disputes now account for a growing share of chargebacks, underscoring the need for better prevention tools.
Fraud remains the most common driver. Two categories dominate:
Disputes also arise when customers claim goods were not delivered, arrived damaged, or did not match descriptions. Poor communication or unclear refund policies often push customers toward banks instead of merchants.
Duplicate charges, incorrect transaction amounts, and settlement mistakes also lead to disputes. Even small operational errors create costly chargebacks.
Chargeback risks vary by payment method and country:
For a closer look at these payment preferences, see our guide on top payment methods in Europe.
Merchants face overlapping rules when it comes to chargebacks.
Merchants must prove they followed SCA requirements or that an exemption applied. If they cannot, issuers often side with the cardholder.
In the eurozone, SEPA gives customers the right to request a no-questions-asked refund within eight weeks. Beyond that, unauthorized debits can be disputed for up to 13 months.
Dispute resolution requires handling sensitive personal and financial data. Merchants must ensure compliance with GDPR when collecting, processing, and submitting evidence.
While card scheme rules are global, European regulators and local courts play a role in disputes. For example, Germany’s consumer protection agencies may pressure merchants with high complaint volumes, while the UK’s Financial Ombudsman can intervene in disputes.
For a deeper dive into how European compliance overlaps with payments, see our guide on embedded payments compliance in Europe.
Merchants can lower dispute rates and protect revenue with practical measures tailored to Europe’s regulatory and consumer environment:
For more insights into how regional habits shape dispute trends, see our report on digital wallets in Europe.
Chargebacks become harder to manage when merchants rely on multiple acquirers or PSPs. Payment orchestration provides the tools to bring dispute management under one roof:
This orchestration advantage mirrors the broader benefits outlined in our guide on payment orchestration vs PSP in Europe.
To prepare for 2026, European merchants should:
More context on regulatory shifts and consumer expectations is available in our report on European retail payment trends in 2025.
What causes most chargebacks in Europe?
Fraudulent transactions, friendly fraud, and customer dissatisfaction remain the top causes.
Are chargeback rules the same across all EU countries?
No. While card scheme rules are consistent, local enforcement and refund rights, especially with SEPA Direct Debit, vary by country.
How does PSD2 affect chargebacks?
PSD2 introduced Strong Customer Authentication, which reduces unauthorized fraud. But merchants must apply exemptions correctly or risk declines and disputes.
Can merchants fight chargebacks successfully?
Yes, but success depends on having clear evidence, centralized reporting, and strong internal processes.
Does orchestration help reduce chargeback costs?
Yes. Orchestration centralizes data, simplifies dispute handling, and improves routing strategies that reduce dispute frequency.
Chargebacks are costly, but European merchants can reduce their impact by strengthening compliance, improving communication, and using technology to manage disputes more effectively.
Orchestration provides the structure to prevent, manage, and resolve chargebacks across multiple markets and providers. It reduces operational complexity while protecting revenue.
Contact Gr4vy to simplify chargeback management and protect your business in 2026.
Developer experience isn’t a nice-to-have, it’s a strategic advantage. In a world where speed, flexibility,…
Gr4vy, the leading cloud-native payment orchestration platform, today announced the release of its Alpha MVP…
Alternative payment methods (APMs) are no longer optional in European ecommerce. Consumers across the region…
Recurring payments are now a foundation of European commerce. From subscription streaming and SaaS to…
Discover how Trek, a global leader in bicycle design and manufacturing, partnered with Gr4vy to…
E-commerce fraud continues to rise across Europe in 2025. Criminals are exploiting real-time payment rails,…