Credit Card Dispute Archives - Law Offices of Gary D. Nitzkin, P.C. Now Serving the Citizens of Ohio Tue, 28 Nov 2023 23:25:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 Did your Bank Decline your Credit Card Dispute. Here is what you need to do NOW. https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/did-your-bank-decline-your-credit-card-dispute-here-is-what-you-need-to-do-now/ https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/did-your-bank-decline-your-credit-card-dispute-here-is-what-you-need-to-do-now/#respond Tue, 28 Nov 2023 23:25:17 +0000 https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/?p=20429 If you notice unexpected charges or billing errors on your credit card statement, you can dispute the claim with your credit card issuer. However, dispute claims are not always successful. If your credit card provider declines your dispute, you remain responsible for paying the disputed amount. A denied dispute means the funds go back [...]

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If you notice unexpected charges or billing errors on your credit card statement, you can dispute the claim with your credit card issuer.

However, dispute claims are not always successful. If your credit card provider declines your dispute, you remain responsible for paying the disputed amount. A denied dispute means the funds go back to the merchant, and the seller has no obligation to refund you or make things right. Left unpaid, disputed amounts can damage your credit score if you fail to pay on time.

In this article, we’ll explore what happens when your credit card issuer rejects your dispute. By understanding the dispute process and potential consequences, you can be better prepared if your claim gets denied.

If you would like assistance from attorneys experienced in credit card disputes, our firm stands ready to help you at no out of pocket charge to you. We only get paid if you win.

Contact us by phone at (216) 358-0591, or contact us at Law Offices of Gary D. Nitzkin, P.C.  for more information

Reasons Credit Card Issuers Decline Disputes

There are several common reasons why credit card issuers deny disputes and leave charges on your account:

  • You missed the dispute deadline: Banks dont have to process your credit card dispute if its older than 60 days from the date that you received your bank statement that includes the charge.  Waiting too long disqualifies the claim.
  • Lack of documentation: Strong evidence is required to back up your dispute. Insufficient proof, like not having a return shipping receipt for merchandise, makes banks more likely to deny the case.
  • Valid and authorized transaction: The credit card issuer verified that the charge was legitimate and allowed under the terms of the cardholder agreement. Things like recurring gym memberships or automatic subscription renewals, or online shopping purchases where you entered your credit card details and confirmed the transaction, are good examples.
  • Outside purchase protection window: Benefits like return guarantees or price matching often have short eligibility periods of only 30-90 days. Disputing older transactions misses the cutoff.
  • Ineligible reason: Not all disputes align with approved criteria per card network rules. Non-covered reasons include dissatisfaction with goods or services rendered as agreed upon.

Many times, a bank will decline your credit card dispute without a good reason.

Citibank loves to use the excuse “Your credit card has a chip in it, so you must have been present when it was used.”  Its as if the Uber driver physically handled your credit card, right?  Another b.s. exxcuse they use is that they think the charge was authorized by you, when it wasn’t  The bank has the burden of proving that the bogus charge was authorized.

Enabling transaction alerts and monitoring your statements regularly are important credit card security measures that allow improper charges to be identified and disputed quickly. But even then, credit card issuers can still deny your claim if the transaction is deemed valid and authorized under the account terms.

Consequences of a Declined Dispute

If your credit card dispute is declined, it’s important to keep several things in mind.

  1. You’re Still Responsible for the Charge

If your dispute is declined, the charged amount remains on your credit card account. You must still pay the entire balance, including the disputed amount.  Ignoring or refusing to pay this balance can have significant financial repercussions. You may face late fees, increased interest charges, and damage to your credit score.

  1. Your Credit Score May Be Impacted

Since the disputed charge remains on your account, it gets reported to the credit bureaus and can negatively affect your credit score. The unpaid balance also increases your credit utilization ratio, a key factor in credit scoring.  Multiple declined disputes signaling potential payment problems or credit management issues could further hurt your creditworthiness. Too many disputes on your account can also lead your credit card issuer to reduce your credit limits or even close your account altogether.

  1. The Seller Keeps Your Money

When the card issuer denies your dispute, the funds for the contested transaction are returned to the merchant.

Declined disputes mean the seller gets to keep your payment. The merchant has no further obligation to issue a refund, provide an exchange, or continue working with you on the matter.  You have limited options to recoup the money directly from the merchant apart from taking them to small claims court or filing a lawsuit.

  1. You May Have Difficulty Disputing Again

If the card issuer denied your dispute once, disputing the same transaction a second time is an uphill battle. The issuer will likely stand by its initial decision.  Frequently disputing the same charge after repeated denials can prompt flags on your account for abusive disputes. This makes successfully overturning a decision even harder.  Issuers can outright block additional attempts to reopen a dispute case once closed. You need new evidence not already submitted with the oiginal claim to have any chance.

 Next Steps If Your Dispute is Declined

If your credit card issuer rejects your dispute, you still have recourse options, including:

  • Initiate a chargeback: You can file a formal chargeback to continue contesting the transaction. The chargeback process provides cardholders a way to further dispute a charge when the standard dispute is denied. You’ll need to submit a claim form to your credit card issuer explaining the reason for the chargeback and providing supporting documentation.
  • Request investigation results: Ask your card issuer to mail you their investigation report detailing why they denied the claim. Review the reasoning thoroughly.
  • File CFPB complaint: Submit a complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau explaining the dispute issue and denial. They assist consumers with credit card fraud, identify theft and card disputes.
  • Consult an attorney: Get in touch with an experienced attorney who can recommend your best legal options and help navigate credit card dispute appeals.
  • Pursue merchant action: Take legal action via arbitration or small claims court against the seller if grounds exist under your state’s laws.
  • Monitor credit reports: Check your credit reports and scores for any negative changes from the disputed charge or denial—dispute inaccuracies.

Your best bet is to hire an attorney and sue the bank. 

While you only have a 1 year time period to sue the bank starting from the date that it declines your dispute, you should file that lawsuit.  This is not a DIY project because the banks have really good and high paid lawyers who will eat you alive in court.  The law can be a bit tricky in this area.  Just know that a law firm that does this kind of work routinely, such as ours, will not charge  you any out of pocket fees.  We collect our fees and costs from the the Defendants that we sue.

The nice thing about suing the bank is that you can sue them in the state of your residence.  If you blow that 1 year statute of limitations, then your only recourse is against the merchant.  You will have to sue the merchant in the state that this merchant conducts business.

We Can Help You at No Out of Pocket Charge

f you are in a tough spot with a credit card dispute, our team at Credit Repair Lawyers of America is here to help. We know the ins and outs of credit repair and can provide the help you need at no out of pocket charge to you. We only get paid if you win.

Gary Nitzkin Owner of Ohio Credit LawyersFor a free consultation call us at (216) 358-0591 or email us at Gary@crlam.com for a free, no obligation consultation.

Let’s solve your credit card issues together.

Attorney Gary Nitzkin

Licensed in Michigan only

We have attorneys in several states to help you.

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Do you have a Credit Card Dispute? Don’t get bullied by your credit card company https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/do-you-have-a-credit-card-dispute-dont-get-bullied-by-your-credit-card-company-2/ https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/do-you-have-a-credit-card-dispute-dont-get-bullied-by-your-credit-card-company-2/#respond Sun, 11 Dec 2022 16:45:01 +0000 https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/?p=951 Ever since online shopping met up with identity theft, the credit card companies have been deluged with credit card disputes.  “I did not get my Amazon order” or “The eBay seller was a thief and never delivered the goods” (this actually happened to me) are common pleas made by consumers such as you and me [...]

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Ever since online shopping met up with identity theft, the credit card companies have been deluged with credit card disputes.  “I did not get my Amazon order” or “The eBay seller was a thief and never delivered the goods” (this actually happened to me) are common pleas made by consumers such as you and me hundreds if not thousands of times a day, to the credit card companies.  So what’s a consumer to do?

Although you have a right to dispute a charge on your credit card account, the credit card company would like you to believe otherwise.

If you have paid for something with a credit card and did not receive it, you have the right dispute it on your credit card company.  Just know that you have to dispute it within 60 days after it first appears on  your credit card statement.  If you dispute it, that does not mean that it comes off your credit card statement automatically, but the credit card company must investigate it.  They will ask you for documentation proving your dispute.  While its hard to prove a negative, you should still cooperate with the company as best as you can by providing emails, letters and any correspondence you have with the merchant.

Don’t be surprised that even after you have supplied all of your well founded documentation showing that you paid for the goods or services and did not receive them, that the credit card company declines your dispute.  Yep, this happens a lot.  Why?  Because sometimes the credit card company, by law, has to eat the loss.  No one likes to do that.

If you have a valid credit card dispute, do not back down from the credit card company.

Under the law, it has to conduct a reasonable reinvestigation into your dispute. This means that they have to talk with both you and the offending merchant.  Sometimes, the merchant will respond and other times, it may not and yet the credit card company may still decline your dispute.  If your dispute has been denied by the company, ask it for all documentation that it received in its investigation to show that you received the goods.  You should know that the onus is on the credit card company to prove that you ordered the goods and services and that you received them.  Sometime, at this phase, the credit card company will back down and credit your account, but don’t count on it.

 

Do NOT be daunted by the credit card company’s Chip Card Defense.

Many credit card today have chips built into them which makes them almost unreproducible.  This is pretty sophisticated technology.  By using the chip in your card when you purchase something at a brick and morter store, the credit card company knows that the physical card was given to you, was actually used in the transaction.  Back in the early 1990s, prior to the chip technology being used, credit cards could be cloned pretty easily.  Someone could scan your credit information without you even knowing about it and make a copy of your card and use it everywhere.  Not so anymore with chips.

Citibank uses the chips in their cards.  Several consumers have come to us complaining that their Citibank accounts were debited for thousands of dollars in goods that they did not purchase.  Citibank has rebuffed these challenges by stating that a chip card was used and declined our clients’ timely posited credit card disputes.  Citibank seems to forget that when it comes to online purchases such as from Microsoft, Doordash and thousands of other merchants, their chip technology does not mean a thing.  Goods and services, including delicious sandwiches can all be purchased with credit card information with no chip being involved.

 

Moral of the story

If you have a credit card dispute:

  1. Be sure to timely send that dispute to your credit card company within 60 days of when the bogus charge hits your credit card account;
  2. Be sure that your dispute is in writing either by U.S. Mail or better yet by email;
  3. Do not take “No” for an answer from the credit card company;
  4. Call us at Credit Repair Lawyers of America and we can help you at no out of pocket charge at (248) 353-2882 since the credit card company has to pay our fees and costs in any successful action. You can also email us for more information at Gary@crlam.com.

 

Call us today.  We can help you at no out of pocket charge

If you have bogus items on your credit card statements, call us at Credit Repair Lawyers of America  and we will help you through this process at no out of pocket charge to you.  We will write the dispute letter for you so that if the bank does not remove the charge, we will be in a good position to sue the bank and possibly the merchant and get your credit card account corrected, your credit report corrected and all of it will cost you nothing out of pocket.

Call or email me, Attorney Gary Nitzkin at Gary@crlam.com or call me at (404) 528-2058 for a free, no obligation consultation.  We are here to help you.

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How to Dispute a credit card charge in Ohio https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/how-to-dispute-a-credit-card-in-ohio/ https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/how-to-dispute-a-credit-card-in-ohio/#respond Tue, 06 Sep 2022 23:15:47 +0000 https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/?p=921 Knowing how to Dispute a credit card charge is vital if you have a credit card account.  While merchants and credit card companies bristle at the term “charge back”, you need to know what to do when you order goods and services that are not delivered or not authorized by you.  Billing errors, identity theft [...]

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Knowing how to Dispute a credit card charge is vital if you have a credit card account.  While merchants and credit card companies bristle at the term “charge back”, you need to know what to do when you order goods and services that are not delivered or not authorized by you.  Billing errors, identity theft and the occasional sleazy merchant with a credit card machine, can all add charges to your credit card statement that you did not authorize.  Moreover, ordering goods over the internet can get you goods (or not), that do not look anything like they did in the pictures.

How to dispute a charge with your credit card company.

The process for charging back a credit card charge with every credit card company is the same.  The question is where do you send your dispute.  Disputing a charge with Discover, American Express, Chase or Citibank is the same 4 step process. Below is a description of where to send your credit card disputes to if you bank with any of these institutions.

Step 1.  Identify the charge you want to dispute, specifically.

Be sure to the the merchant name, date of the charge and amount available to you when you create your dispute.  You can create the dispute online or write a letter if you must.  I am not keen on the post office ever since COVID hit because a lot of our mail was never delivered and never returned to us.  With an online dispute, you can be certain that it will be received by the credit card company.  Be sure to capture a screen shot of every dispute and correspondence that you have with your bank.

Step 2 Wait no longer than 2 weeks for the acknowledgment.

The credit card company must acknowledge your dispute within 30 days, but with the speed of email, there is no reason why they cannot acknowledge your dispute in 2 weeks.  If you don’t receive an acknowledgment in 2 weeks time, make  your dispute again because you only have 60 days from the date that the charge hits your account to dispute it.

Step 3 – The bank must conduct a reasonable investigation into your dispute.

This means that they must contact the merchant to get its side of the story.  The reality of these situations is that even if you swear on a stack of bibles that you are telling the truth, the bank will probably side with the merchant, but who knows?  You still have to go through this process before you can sue the bank to credit your account.

Step 4 – Get your dispute results from the bank.  Chances are strong that it will rule against you (See step 3 above).

Take heart.  You were prepared for this since you were smart enough to read this.  Seriously though, once the bank declines your dispute, you have just 2 options; walk away and eat the loss or 2.  litigate with the bank with a law firm that will cost you nothing out of pocket.  Remember, the banks are paying their attorneys on an hourly basis so really, you have an advantage.

When the credit card company denies your dispute, call us.  We will take it from there.

The banks have had a large upsurge in charge backs over the past several years due to identity theft.  This is still the fastest growing crime in America.  Still, that does not mean that you should pay for the goods and services that someone else billed to your account.  The banks are taking a hardline position wanting to recoup the funds that they paid to the merchant out of your account and they don’t really care who reimburses them.  We do.

What to do if the credit card company refuses to credit your account?

Let us fight for you, for free.  We are happy to  draft the right dispute letter for you, for free.  We take the time to understand your complaint and advise you of your rights.  Our advice is free and so is the dispute letter.  If we have to sue the merchant or the credit card company, our fees and costs get paid when we collect from these defendants.  Our lawsuits cost you nothing out of pocket.   If you have inaccurate or unauthorized charges on your credit card, call us at Law Offices of Gary D. Nitzkin, P.C. at (216) 358-0591or email us at Gary@micreditlawyer.com for a free, no obligation consultation.

How to Dispute a Credit Card Charge with Chase ©

Chase would like you to try to resolve issues with the merchants first.  This is not a bad idea except that many merchants will not deal with  you fairly.  They just want to get paid.  You also only have 60 days from the date that a charge appears on your credit card statement to dispute it.  If you miss that 60 day period, then you can only fight it out with the merchant which is a lot harder than fighting it out with Chase.  If you have a dispute to your Chase credit card account call (866) 564-2262 which is the phone number to Chase’s dispute line.  Have your credit card and statement that contains the bogus charge in your hand when you call.  You can also sign into your Chase account here, which is a far better idea that disputing over the phone.  Here is the link to sign into your Chase account.

How to Dispute a credit card charge with American Express ©.

You can log into your American Express account here.   You then choose your card and then you can start your dispute.  Again, be sure to have your credit card and credit card statement that contains the bogus charge in your hand or in front of you when you posit the dispute.  You will need to identify the charge or charges you are disputing and the reasons why you are disputing them.  Good reasons to dispute a charge include not receiving the goods and services you ordered, whether received untimely or not all or receiving goods and services that you did not order.  Issues with quality may not be a reason to dispute a charge with your American Express, but its still worth a try.  If you have to call American Express you can reach their Dispute Department at (800) 528-4800.  You should only use the telephone to make your dispute if you absolutely must.  Disputing your credit card charges on line is a safer bet because you can take screen shots to prove the date on which you made your dispute(s).

How to Dispute a credit card charge with Bank of America ©.

 Like most banks, you can log into your Bank of America account here.   You can also call Bank of America at (800) 432-1000 to make  your dispute.  Again, you are better off making your dispute online and saving screenshots of the dispute that document the date that you made it.  You should also have your credit card and the credit card statement in  your hand when you make the dispute to Bank of America.

A word about “chip” transactions and how to dispute them

Most credit cards today contain a chip in the credit card in an effort to reduce the amount of credit card fraud that has plagued the industry.  Using a credit card with a chip allows the credit card company to verify that the consumer who owns the card is the actual person using the card….most of the time.  You see, while credit card magnetic stripes can easily be replicated, chips cannot.

While the chip is a good idea, it’s not perfect.  For example, when you order goods online such as an Uber or on Amazon, neither of these merchants are using the chip in your card to process the charge.  They are simply taking your credit card information that is readily available on the front and back.  Moreover, there are times when a merchant’s chip reader is not working right and they simply ask you to swipe the card the card instead of using the chip.  These situations avoid the security that the chip provides.  Hence, even though your card may have a chip in it, it can still be compromised.

DO NOT LET A BANK DECLINE YOUR DISPUTE BECAUSE YOUR CARD HAS A CHIP IN IT.  If you have a dispute to a charge on your credit card statement and the bank declines to process that dispute because your card has a chip, call us.  We will fight for you and it will cost you nothing out of pocket.

Let us fight for you at no out of pocket charge to you.

Let us fight for you, for free.  We are happy to  draft the right dispute letter for you, for free.  We take the time to understand your complaint and advise you of your rights.  Our advice is free and so is the dispute letter.  If we have to sue the merchant or the credit card company, our fees and costs get paid when we collect from these defendants.  Our lawsuits cost you nothing out of pocket.   Visit us at Law Offices of Gary D. Nitzkin, P.C. , call us at (216) 358-0591 or email us at Gary@micreditlawyer.com for a free, no obligation consultation. Our lawsuits cost you nothing out of pocket.  Fighting the bank on your own is a bad idea.  The banks’ lawyers fight these fights every day with very experience and seasoned lawyers.  You should have one in your corner, too.  We want to be your lawyers!

Attorney Gary Nitzkin, licensed in Michigan only

Attorney Gary Nitzkin

Licensed in Michigan only

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Do you have a Credit Card Dispute? Don’t get bullied by your credit card company https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/do-you-have-a-credit-card-dispute-dont-get-bullied-by-your-credit-card-company/ https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/do-you-have-a-credit-card-dispute-dont-get-bullied-by-your-credit-card-company/#respond Mon, 02 May 2022 20:23:41 +0000 https://www.ohiocreditlawyers.com/?p=842 Ever since online shopping met up with identity theft, the credit card companies have been deluged with credit card disputes.  “I did not get my Amazon order” or “The eBay seller was a thief and never delivered the goods” (this actually happened to me) are common pleas made by consumers such as you and me [...]

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Ever since online shopping met up with identity theft, the credit card companies have been deluged with credit card disputes.  “I did not get my Amazon order” or “The eBay seller was a thief and never delivered the goods” (this actually happened to me) are common pleas made by consumers such as you and me hundreds if not thousands of times a day, to the credit card companies.  So whats a lender to do?

 

Although you have a right to dispute a charge on your credit card account, the credit card company would like you to believe otherwise.

 

If you have paid for something with a credit card and did not receive it, you have the right dispute it on your credit card company.  Just know that you have to dispute it within 60 days after it first appears on  your credit card statement.  If you dispute it, that does not mean that it comes off your credit card statement automatically, but the credit card company must investigate it.  They will ask you for documentation proving your dispute.  While its hard to prove a negative, you should still cooperate with the company as best as you can by providing emails, letters and any correspondence you have with the merchant.

 

Don’t be surprised that even after you have supplied all of your well founded documentation showing that you paid for the goods or services and did not receive them, that the credit card company declines your dispute.  Yep, this happens a lot.  Why?  Because sometimes the credit card company, by law, has to eat the loss.  No one likes to do that.

 

If you have a valid credit card dispute, do not back down from the credit card company.

 

Under the law, it has to conduct a reasonable reinvestigation into your dispute. This means that they have to talk with both you and the offending merchant.  Sometimes, the merchant will respond and other times, it may not and yet the credit card company may still decline your dispute.  If your dispute has been denied by the company, ask it for all documentation that it received in its investigation to show that you received the goods.  You should know that the onus is on the credit card company to prove that you ordered the goods and services and that you received them.  Sometime, at this phase, the credit card company will back down and credit your account, but don’t count on it.

 

Do NOT be daunted by the credit card company’s Chip Card Defense.

 

Many credit card today have chips built into them which makes them almost unreproducible.  This is pretty sophisticated technology.  By using the chip in your card when you purchase something at a brick and morter store, the credit card company knows that the physical card was given to you, was actually used in the transaction.  Back in the early 1990s, prior to the chip technology being used, credit cards could be cloned pretty easily.  Someone could scan your credit information without you even knowing about it and make a copy of your card and use it everywhere.  Not so anymore with chips.

 

Citibank uses the chips in their cards.  Several consumers have come to us complaining that their Citibank accounts were debited for thousands of dollars in goods that they did not purchase.  Citibank has rebuffed these challenges by stating that a chip card was used and declined our clients’ timely posited credit card disputes.  Citibank seems to forget that when it comes to online purchases such as from Microsoft, Doordash and thousands of other merchants, their chip technology does not mean a thing.  Goods and services, including delicious sandwiches can all be purchased with credit card information with no chip being involved.

 

Moral of the story

 

If you have a credit card dispute:

 

  1. Be sure to timely send that dispute to your credit card company within 60 days of when the bogus charge hits your credit card account;
  2. Be sure that your dispute is in writing either by U.S. Mail or better yet by email;
  3. Do not take “No” for an answer from the credit card company;
  4. Call us at Law Offices of Gary D. Nitzkin, P.C. and we can help you at no out of pocket charge at (216) 358-0591 since the credit card company has to pay our fees and costs in any successful action. You can also email us for more information at Gary@crlam.com.

 

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