How It WorksPlatformSolutionsToolsResourcesGlossary Get Early Access
HomeBlogChargeback Recovery
Finance & Operations

Chargeback Recovery for CPG Brands: How to Dispute and Recover Invalid Retailer Chargebacks

Retailers take chargebacks for compliance violations, shortages, and labeling issues — and many of them are wrong. Here is how to identify invalid chargebacks and get your money back.

SC
Slater Caskey
CEO, Claros Farm & Founder, Guidance · July 6, 2026

Chargebacks are deductions taken by retailers and distributors for alleged compliance violations, shipping errors, labeling issues, and shortages. They are a significant cost for CPG brands — typically 2–6% of gross sales — and a meaningful percentage of them are invalid. Recovering invalid chargebacks requires a systematic process for identifying, documenting, and disputing them.

The Most Common Invalid Chargebacks

Chargeback TypeWhy It Is Often InvalidDocumentation Needed to Dispute
Shortage claimsCarrier signed for full quantity; shortage occurred at retailer's DCBill of lading, proof of delivery, carrier confirmation
Late deliveryDelivery was on time; retailer's receiving records are wrongCarrier delivery confirmation with timestamp, appointment confirmation
Labeling violationLabel meets current requirements; retailer's spec sheet is outdatedCurrent label, current retailer spec sheet, date of label approval
Pallet configurationPallet was configured correctly; retailer's records are wrongPacking list, photos of pallet at time of shipment
Price discrepancyPrice on invoice matches the purchase order; retailer's system has wrong priceOriginal purchase order, invoice, price change documentation
Unauthorized deductionNo promotional agreement or compliance violation existsAbsence of authorization; request for documentation from retailer

The Dispute Process

Step 1 — Identify: Review all chargebacks in your retailer portals weekly. Categorize each as authorized (you agree with the charge), potentially invalid (you need to investigate), or clearly invalid (you have documentation showing the charge is wrong).

Step 2 — Document: For each invalid chargeback, gather the documentation listed above. The stronger your documentation, the higher your win rate. Organize documentation by chargeback number for easy reference.

Step 3 — Dispute: Submit the dispute through the retailer's portal within the dispute window (typically 30–90 days). Include a clear explanation of why the chargeback is invalid and attach all supporting documentation. Be specific — "shortage claim invalid because carrier signed for full quantity as shown in attached POD" is more effective than a general objection.

Step 4 — Follow up: Most retailers take 30–60 days to process disputes. Follow up if you have not received a response within 45 days. Track your dispute outcomes to identify patterns — if you are consistently losing disputes for a particular chargeback type, your documentation process needs improvement.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good chargeback dispute win rate?

A well-run chargeback dispute process should win 50–70% of disputed chargebacks. If your win rate is below 40%, you are likely disputing too many authorized chargebacks or your documentation is insufficient. If your win rate is above 80%, you may be under-disputing — there are likely valid disputes you are not pursuing.

How can I prevent chargebacks in the first place?

Prevention is more effective than recovery. The highest-impact prevention measures are: (1) photograph every pallet before it leaves your warehouse or co-packer, (2) use carriers with reliable proof of delivery documentation, (3) review retailer routing guides quarterly and update your shipping procedures when requirements change, and (4) confirm purchase order prices match your invoice before shipping. These four steps eliminate the majority of invalid chargebacks before they occur.

Automated chargeback identification

Guidance analyzes your retailer deduction reports and flags chargebacks that do not match your shipping records, promotional agreements, or compliance documentation — so you know exactly which ones to dispute.

Get Early Access →

Related: Deduction Management · UNFI Deduction Codes · Retailer Portal Management