Chargeback response generator
Chargeback and payment dispute messages need careful wording. A customer may be angry, the billing record may still be under review, and the support team should avoid pressure, legal advice, or requests for sensitive payment details. ReplyPolish helps turn the confirmed facts into a calm response that documents the support path and keeps the next step specific.
When to use it
- A customer says they are opening a chargeback or card dispute.
- The team needs to explain that billing records, invoices, access logs, or fulfillment details are being reviewed.
- The reply should avoid telling the customer what to do with their bank or card issuer.
- The business needs a clear written support path before the billing case is closed.
Input facts to lock
Issue: chargeback threat, payment dispute, unrecognized charge, duplicate billing, canceled account, or unresolved refund request. Confirmed facts: invoice number, billing date, subscription status, order status, prior support ticket, or refund review status. Boundary: do not give legal advice, pressure the customer, ask for full card data, or promise a reversal before review. Next step: billing record review, documented support reply, evidence check, refund decision, or follow-up window.
Safe wording shape
I understand why you want this billing issue reviewed carefully. We will check the billing record and the support history tied to this case. Please do not send full card numbers, passwords, or security codes. We will document the review and send the next confirmed update by [time].
Common mistakes to avoid
- Do not threaten account closure, collections, or legal action in a routine support reply.
- Do not ask the customer to cancel a dispute unless that instruction comes from an approved internal policy.
- Do not write as if the customer is wrong before the billing record has been checked.
- Do not include private payment data in a public or shared support channel.
Frequently asked questions
Should a chargeback reply tell the customer what to do with their bank?
Avoid legal or bank-process advice unless the wording is approved by the business. Keep the support reply focused on the documented billing review and next support update.
What details are safe to request during a payment dispute?
Use limited identifiers such as invoice number, transaction date, account email, or last four digits only when appropriate. Do not ask for full card numbers, passwords, or security codes.