How to Avoid Chargebacks as a Small Business in New Zealand
Chargebacks can claw back money weeks after a job is done. Here's how they work, why they hurt small NZ businesses, and how to avoid them with open banking and escrow.
You finished the job, got paid, and moved on. Then, weeks later, the money vanishes from your account with a note about a "disputed transaction." Welcome to the chargeback — one of the most frustrating experiences in small business, because you can do everything right and still lose.
For New Zealand service businesses working on tight margins, a single chargeback can wipe out the profit on several jobs. Here's how they work, why they happen, and — most importantly — how to structure your payments so they can't happen to you.
What is a chargeback?
A chargeback is when a customer disputes a card payment with their bank and the bank reverses it, pulling the money back out of your account. It was originally designed as consumer protection against fraud and dodgy merchants, which is a good thing.
The problem is that the process heavily favours the cardholder. The bank often refunds first and asks questions later, and the burden falls on you — the business — to prove the charge was legitimate. Even when you win, you've spent hours gathering evidence. When you lose, you're out the money and often a chargeback fee on top.
Why chargebacks hurt small businesses so much
For a big retailer, chargebacks are a manageable cost of doing business. For a sole trader or small service business, they're brutal:
- The amounts are large. A trade job or a project invoice can be thousands of dollars — not a $30 impulse buy.
- The work is already done. Unlike a product you might get returned, your labour and materials are gone. You can't un-build a deck.
- The timing is unpredictable. A chargeback can land weeks after you've been "paid" and spent the money.
- The process is stacked against you. You have to prove a negative, often without the right documentation.
Common reasons chargebacks happen
Not all chargebacks are fraud. They fall into a few buckets:
- Genuine fraud — a stolen card was used.
- "Friendly fraud" — the customer recognises the charge but disputes it anyway, sometimes as a way to get the work for free.
- Buyer's remorse or disputes — the customer is unhappy with the work and uses a chargeback instead of talking to you.
- Confusion — the customer doesn't recognise your business name on their statement.
The uncomfortable truth is that as a business, you can't fully control any of these once you've accepted a card payment.
How to reduce chargebacks (if you take cards)
If card payments are part of your business, some habits genuinely lower your risk:
- Use a clear billing descriptor so your business name is recognisable on statements.
- Keep thorough records — signed quotes, before-and-after photos, written approvals, and delivery confirmations.
- Communicate in writing so there's a paper trail of what was agreed and delivered.
- Get explicit sign-off that the work is complete and accepted.
These help you win disputes, but notice the theme: they're all about fighting chargebacks after the fact. They don't stop them from happening.
How to avoid chargebacks entirely
The only way to truly avoid chargebacks is to not rely on card payments for the transactions that matter. Two tools do this.
Open banking payments
When a customer pays via open banking, the money moves bank-to-bank, directly from their account, authorised by them through their own bank. There's no card network in the middle, and therefore no card chargeback mechanism to invoke. Once the payment is made, it's final.
Escrow
Escrow adds a second layer of protection that actually benefits both sides. The customer's money is held safely in a trust account until the work is approved, so they don't need a chargeback to feel protected — if there's a genuine problem, there's a proper dispute process while the funds are paused. And because the release is something the customer explicitly confirms, you're not exposed to a surprise reversal down the track.
Together, open banking and escrow replace the "pay and pray, then maybe claw it back" model with something cleaner: the money is committed up front, protected in the middle, and released with mutual agreement at the end.
The bottom line
You can spend your life gathering evidence to win chargeback disputes — or you can structure your payments so chargebacks aren't possible in the first place. For New Zealand small businesses, that means moving away from card dependence toward open banking payments held in escrow.
The money still moves quickly and settles in NZD. It's just final, protected, and can't be quietly reversed weeks later. Get started with CASHBOX and get paid without looking over your shoulder.
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