How to Dispute a Card Transaction in Austria (2026)
Jules de Bruin
Expat in Vienna
Updated: June 6 2026 | Found helpful by 9 others
Updated June 2026. To dispute an Austrian card charge, file an Umsatzreklamation directly in your bank app or portal (Sparkasse George, myPayLife, card complete) with evidence attached. Contact the merchant first, then submit the dispute immediately. If unresolved, escalate to the issuer Ombudsstelle, then to the FMA or Arbeiterkammer. Keep your receipt, emails and cancellation proof. The stronger your first submission, the faster the outcome.
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How Do You Dispute a Credit Card Charge in Austria?
To dispute a card charge in Austria, file an Umsatzreklamation through your bank app or portal with supporting evidence. The six steps below cover the full process from initial merchant contact through regulatory escalation.
- 1
Contact the merchant first
Write to the merchant by email or in writing and request a refund. Keep a copy of all correspondence. Many disputes resolve at this stage without involving your bank. The merchant contact attempt strengthens your case if you need to escalate.
- 2
File an Umsatzreklamation in your bank app or portal
Log into your bank app (Sparkasse George, myPayLife, or card complete portal) and locate the disputed transaction. Select the dispute or Reklamation option, choose the dispute reason (fraud, non-delivery, duplicate charge, etc.), and submit. Most Austrian issuers accept disputes in-app without requiring a branch visit.
- 3
Attach evidence
Upload your receipt, email correspondence with the merchant, cancellation confirmation, or any other proof relevant to the dispute. Clear, timestamped documents increase the likelihood of a fast resolution. Attach everything in one submission rather than sending documents in separate messages.
- 4
Wait for the issuer investigation
The issuer acknowledges the dispute within 5 to 10 business days and investigates under EU Payment Services Directive rules. The full investigation can take up to 60 days. During this period a provisional credit may appear on your account. Keep the disputed amount available in case the investigation finds in favour of the merchant.
- 5
Escalate to the issuer Ombudsstelle
If the issuer rejects your dispute or does not respond within 60 days, escalate to the issuer's named Ombudsstelle. Card complete and PayLife publish a named Ombudsstelle. Submit your original dispute documentation plus the issuer's rejection letter.
- 6
Escalate to FMA or Arbeiterkammer if deadlocked
If the Ombudsstelle process fails to resolve the dispute, file a complaint with the Austrian Financial Market Authority (FMA) at fma.gv.at or seek free consumer advice from the Arbeiterkammer at arbeiterkammer.at. The Verein fur Konsumenteninformation (VKI) also offers support for complex chargeback disputes.
Important: pre-authorisation holds
Hotels, petrol stations, and car-rental firms place holds that reduce your available limit. Your bank cannot remove these holds early. They expire automatically within 7 to 30 days. The Umsatzreklamation process does not apply to holds, only to completed transactions.
Which Cards Make Disputes Easiest?
The fastest dispute outcomes come from cards with in-app dispute filing, instant card freeze, and real-time fraud alerts. Revolut and N26 let you open a dispute and freeze your card within seconds on your phone. free.at Mastercard Gold adds full Mastercard chargeback rights and travel insurance at no annual fee, giving the strongest buyer protection of any free Austrian card.
Revolut
Instant in-app freeze, dispute filing and fraud alerts.
Why we recommend it: Instant card freeze, in-app dispute filing and real-time fraud alerts make chargebacks fastest.
Best for: People who want full control from their phone.
Pros
- +In-app dispute filing
- +Instant freeze
- +Real-time alerts
Cons
- −Phone support varies by tier
- −Not a classic credit line
- In-app disputes
- Instant freeze
- Fraud alerts
N26
In-app card block and transaction reporting.
Why we recommend it: Free card with in-app blocking and clear transaction reporting that speeds up dispute evidence.
Best for: Everyday users who want simple in-app control.
Pros
- +In-app card block
- +Push notifications
- +English app
Cons
- −Phone support premium-only
- −No revolving credit
- In-app block
- Push alerts
- English support
free.at Mastercard Gold
Mastercard chargeback protection with travel insurance.
Why we recommend it: Full Mastercard chargeback rights plus travel insurance, with no annual fee and no FX fee.
Best for: Those who want credit-card buyer protection for free.
Pros
- +No annual fee
- +Mastercard protection
- +Travel insurance
Cons
- −Cash interest from booking day
- −Full monthly repayment
- No annual fee
- Chargeback rights
- Travel insurance
What Is an Umsatzreklamation?
An Umsatzreklamation is the Austrian term for a formal card transaction complaint filed with your card issuer. It is the equivalent of a chargeback request in the UK or US. Unlike informal complaints, the Umsatzreklamation triggers a structured investigation under EU Payment Services Directive rules, which sets defined timelines for issuer response and refund.
In Austria, most Visa and Mastercard transactions issued through banks (Sparkasse, Raiffeisen, Bank Austria, BAWAG) are processed by card complete Service Bank AG or PayLife. These issuers maintain their own Umsatzreklamation portals. N26 and Revolut handle disputes through their own in-app processes but follow the same EU rules.
Common reasons for filing an Umsatzreklamation: a charge you did not authorise, a merchant who charged you after a cancellation, a double charge for the same transaction, goods or services not delivered, or a card-not-present transaction you did not make.
What If the Merchant Will Not Refund You?
If the merchant refuses a refund, file the Umsatzreklamation with your issuer immediately. You do not need the merchant's agreement to open a dispute. Provide your email or written evidence that you contacted the merchant and they declined.
Your issuer (card complete, PayLife, Sparkasse George, or your bank directly) will contact the merchant's acquiring bank under Visa or Mastercard network chargeback rules. The merchant then has the option to accept the chargeback or provide counter-evidence. If the issuer accepts your claim, the amount is credited to your account.
Keep all documentation. If the merchant provides counter-evidence and the issuer sides with the merchant, you can still escalate to the Ombudsstelle and subsequently to the Arbeiterkammer or FMA.
Where Do You Escalate a Card Complaint?
If your issuer rejects the dispute or does not respond within 60 days, escalate through the following channels. Card complete and PayLife publish a named Ombudsstelle as required by Austrian banking law. Start there before contacting regulators.
| Problem | First route | Escalation route |
|---|---|---|
| Issuer rejects dispute | Issuer Ombudsstelle (card complete / PayLife) | FMA or Arbeiterkammer |
| Fraud / unauthorised transaction | Issuer fraud team (block card, file Umsatzreklamation) | FMA |
| Merchant charged after cancellation | Umsatzreklamation with cancellation proof | Arbeiterkammer or VKI |
| Goods or services not delivered | Umsatzreklamation with order proof | Arbeiterkammer or VKI |
| Bank process complaint (slow, no response) | Issuer Ombudsstelle | FMA |
| Pre-authorisation hold not released | Contact issuer with merchant confirmation | Issuer Ombudsstelle after 30 days |
Sources: FMA, Arbeiterkammer, card complete, PayLife. Updated: June 2026.
What Evidence Do You Need for a Chargeback?
The strength of your first submission determines how quickly your dispute resolves. Attach all relevant documents in one go. Issuers cannot request additional evidence on your behalf from the merchant, so provide everything upfront.
Receipt or invoice
The original purchase receipt, order confirmation email, or invoice showing the expected amount and date. This establishes what you agreed to pay.
Cancellation confirmation
If the dispute is about a cancelled order or subscription, provide the cancellation email or written confirmation from the merchant. Screenshot the cancellation if no email was sent.
Merchant correspondence
Emails or letters showing you contacted the merchant and their response (or non-response). This demonstrates you followed the required first step before involving the issuer.
Bank statement showing the charge
A screenshot or PDF of your account statement showing the disputed transaction with date, merchant name, and amount.
Proof of non-delivery (if applicable)
For goods not received: delivery tracking showing the item was never delivered, or written communication with the merchant confirming non-delivery.
Copy-paste dispute template
Subject: Umsatzreklamation – [Merchant Name] – [Date] – EUR [Amount] Cardholder name: [Your full name] Card last 4 digits: [XXXX] Merchant: [Merchant name] Transaction date: [DD.MM.YYYY] Transaction amount: EUR [XX,XX] Issue type: [Fraud / Non-delivery / Duplicate charge / Charged after cancellation / Other] Merchant contact attempted: Yes – [date and method, e.g. email on DD.MM.YYYY] Merchant response: [Refused refund / No response] Requested action: Full refund of EUR [XX,XX] Evidence attached: - [ ] Receipt or order confirmation - [ ] Cancellation confirmation - [ ] Merchant email correspondence - [ ] Bank statement showing charge - [ ] Other: [describe]
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a card dispute take in Austria?
Most issuers acknowledge the Umsatzreklamation within 5 to 10 business days. The full investigation can take up to 60 days under EU Payment Services Directive rules. If you escalate to the Ombudsstelle, add another 4 to 6 weeks. Escalation to the FMA or Arbeiterkammer typically adds 8 to 12 weeks.
Can you dispute a debit card charge in Austria?
Yes. The Umsatzreklamation process applies to both credit cards and debit cards (Bankomatkarte / Debitkarte). For debit cards, the dispute is handled by your account-holding bank rather than a separate card issuer like card complete or PayLife. The same evidence requirements apply.
What is the deadline to file a card dispute in Austria?
Austrian issuers generally require you to file an Umsatzreklamation within 30 to 60 days of the statement date. Some issuers follow Mastercard and Visa network rules, which allow up to 120 days from the transaction date for certain dispute categories. Check your card terms for the exact deadline.
Does filing a dispute affect your credit score in Austria?
No. Filing an Umsatzreklamation does not affect your KSV1870 credit record. The KSV1870 tracks payment defaults, not consumer disputes. A successful chargeback that reverses a fraudulent charge can actually protect your record by preventing a missed payment from appearing.
What if the hotel or car-rental hold has not been released?
Hotels, petrol stations, and car-rental firms place pre-authorisation holds that reduce your available limit. Your bank cannot remove these holds early because they are placed by the merchant's acquiring bank. Most holds expire automatically within 7 to 30 days. If a hold remains after 30 days, contact your issuer with the merchant's confirmation that no charge was taken.
Sources: FMA (fma.gv.at), Arbeiterkammer (arbeiterkammer.at), card complete Service Bank AG, PayLife Bank GmbH, EU Payment Services Directive 2 (PSD2). Updated: June 2026.
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