Key takeaways
- You can cancel a recurring credit card payment by contacting the business, updating your payment details online or cancelling your account.
- If this doesn't work for some reason the next step is to contact your bank or card provider to cancel the payment.
- If someone makes a fraudulent transaction on your credit card or you don't receive the product or service you've paid for you can dispute the transaction and request a chargeback.
How do I cancel a credit card payment?
You have a few ways you can cancel or reverse a credit card payment, depending on how and when the payment is made.
- Cancelling payments that are scheduled for a future date. If you have a scheduled or recurring payment, you can usually cancel it by logging into your account and updating your payment details – or cancelling the service.
- Cancelling credit card payments for items or services you haven't received yet. If you want to cancel something like a travel booking or an online shopping order that hasn't been sent yet, contact the business directly. Depending on the cancellation policy, you may be offered a refund, store credit or another solution.
- Cancelling credit card payments for retail items. If you've already received the items, you can contact the business to ask for a refund, exchange or store credit. Note that you usually need to return an item unused to get a full refund, unless it was damaged or defective when you got it.
If you can deal with a payment cancellation via the business itself, that should be your first step. But if the merchant or service is uncontactable or isn't responding, your next step is to contact your bank or card provider. They can assist in cancelling any recurring payments. You can also request a chargeback from your bank or credit card company. This is a way of reversing a payment made with a credit or debit card. You can request a chargeback by disputing a transaction because: You can't request a chargeback for something if you paid with cash, direct debit, BPAY or a money transfer. The process for lodging a dispute varies by bank. Most banks ask you to dispute a transaction using their banking app or via an online dispute form. Some will let you provide the necessary information online, while you may need to call others. Firstly, make sure there is actually an error by going through these steps: It is your right as a consumer and account holder to dispute a variety of credit card errors that include: You will receive confirmation from the bank once they have received your request for a dispute resolution. At this point it may be necessary for you to sign a form authorising their investigation which you will need to return to the bank in a specified time frame. Once you have lodged your credit card dispute with your bank, you can expect it to go through these three stages:
Must read: Can't cancel the payment? Call your bank
Disputing a transaction and getting a chargeback
How to lodge a dispute and reverse a transaction
What should I check before I dispute a transaction?
What transactions can I dispute?
What happens after my dispute is lodged?
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hi, i got scammed by a dodgy travel agency in 2009. They told me they went into liquidation because of the gfc. I lost $5700, paid for a holiday, the receipt never had gst and was not specific. I was stupid. They told me they would reimburse me with flight credit and never did. Just scammed my money. I was told i had 5 yrs to take them to court, and was put off because its in qld and im in nsw. Never had the money to do that either. Is it possible to reverse the transaction or anything from that long ago?
Hi Mat. Thanks for your question. Please contact either Visa or MasterCard for further information.