Monitoring programs
Learn about the monitoring programs operated by the card networks, and what you should do if you're placed into one.
As part of your financial obligations to the card networks, you must ensure that disputes (also called chargebacks) and fraud are kept at acceptable levels. If these exceed the thresholds dictated by each network (e.g., Visa or Mastercard), you' re placed into one of their monitoring programs. As part of a program, you can incur monthly fines and additional fees until you reduce your dispute or fraud levels.
MoneyCollect can work with you on a remediation plan to reduce the levels of disputes or fraud related to your account. We also communicate directly with the networks and relay information on a monthly basis. Download our remediation template to get started.
Failure to comply with the requirements of a program within the specified time period (what the networks call a timeline) can result in the network refusing to process further payments using their cards. While this is extremely rare, you need to take immediate action to address the situation.
Visa monitoring programs
The Visa Fraud Monitoring Program (VFMP) and Visa Dispute Monitoring Program (VDMP) apply to users in all of our supported countries. The Visa Fraud Monitoring Program-3DS (VFMP-3DS) is a third program that only applies to users based in the U.S. The timelines used by either program depend on which threshold—Standard or Excessive—has been exceeded.
Each timeline spans a 12-month period and determines what actions to take on a monthly basis. At the beginning of each month Visa reviews your previous month' s activity to see if it has exceeded any of their established thresholds. If so, we' ll reach out and discuss this with you.
For users in the US, EU, Canada, Australia, and Brazil, domestic and cross-border activity counts towards their monthly totals. For users outside of those regions, only domestic activity is counted.
Visa operates an early warning system that warns users through MoneyCollect who are at risk of being placed into a monitoring program. Users who meet the early warning threshold aren' t immediately placed into the program. Instead, they' re given the opportunity to reduce the level of fraud on their account to avoid placement.
1.Visa Dispute Monitoring program
VDMP applies to users with an unusually high level of disputed payments on their account. Users are placed into this program if they meet or exceed the thresholds for the following criteria:
The total number of payments that have been disputed (dispute count)
The ratio of disputed payments to all payments (dispute rate)
Early warning notifications may not occur if your account immediately matches or exceeds the Standard or Excessive thresholds of VDMP. FINES: None. You have the opportunity to take action that reduces your dispute level before it exceeds a threshold where fines are incurred.
2.Visa Fraud Monitoring program
VFMP applies to users with an excessive level of fraud on their account, which is calculated using both fraudulent chargebacks and TC40 data. You' re placed into this program if you exceed the thresholds for the following criteria:
The total volume in U.S. dollars of Visa payments that are fraudulent (Fraud Volume)
The ratio of the volume in fraudulent Visa payments to all payments (Fraud Rate)
Early warning notifications may not occur if your account immediately matches or exceeds the Standard or Excessive thresholds of VFMP. FINES: None. You can take action that reduces your fraud level before it incurs penalties.
The following Standard timeline applies to the 12-month period that a user is part of a card monitoring program:
3.VFMP: Visa Fraud Monitoring Program-3DS (U.S.-only)
VFMP-3DS applies to U.S. users with an excessive level of domestic 3D-Secure fraud on their account. You' re placed into this program if you exceed the thresholds for the following criteria:
The total volume in U.S. dollars of Visa 3DS domestic payments that are fraudulent (fraud volume)
The ratio of the volume in fraudulent payments to 3DS domestic payments (fraud rate)
Mastercard monitoring programs
Mastercard' s Excessive Chargeback Program (ECP) consists of two levels: Excessive Chargeback Merchant (ECM) and High Excessive Chargeback Merchant (HECM), and it applies to users in all supported countries. The Excessive Fraud Merchant (EFM) Compliance Program is a separate program that applies to users in all supported countries besides Germany, India, and Switzerland.
If your account exceeds program thresholds, Mastercard places you into this program and MoneyCollect notifies you. If you exceed both EFM and ECP thresholds, you' re placed in EFM but not ECP. For example, you exceed EFM and ECP thresholds in March and April but only exceed ECP thresholds in May. In April, you' d be placed in month 2 of EFM and fined accordingly. In May, you' d be placed in month 3 of ECP despite the EFM identifications taking precedent in prior months.
You exit ECM as soon as your level of disputes drops below the ECM threshold for 3 consecutive months. If you' re in HECM and your dispute level drops but still exceeds ECM thresholds (between 1.5-2.99%), you move to that program. To be removed from EFM, you need to avoid at least one of the conditions for 3 consecutive months.
As part of the remediation process, you must provide MoneyCollect with details on the steps you' re taking to prevent disputes and your timeline for implementation.
1.ECP: Mastercard Excessive Chargeback Program
Users are placed into ECP if they meet or exceed the thresholds for the following criteria:
The total number of Mastercard payments that have been disputed (chargeback count)
The chargeback-to-transaction ratio (chargeback rate) The chargeback rate is a ratio of disputed payments to all payments. It' s calculated as the number of Mastercard disputes received in a calendar month compared to the total number of Mastercard payments from the preceding month. You must exceed both thresholds to qualify for ECM.
ECM: Mastercard Excessive Chargeback Merchant
Issuer recovery assessment applies an additional 5 USD per chargeback fee for each chargeback over 300 chargebacks. For example, a merchant identified in month 4 of ECM with 400 disputes will be assessed a 5,500 USD fine (5,000 USD + (400-300) x 5 USD).
HECM: Mastercard High Excessive Chargeback Merchant
2.EFM: Mastercard Excessive Fraud Merchant Compliance Program
You' re placed into the EFM program if you meet or exceed the thresholds for the following criteria:
Number of e-commerce Mastercard payments
The total volume in U.S. dollars of Mastercard payments that result in fraudulent chargebacks (net fraud volume) calculated by dispute reason code (reason code 4837 and 4863)
The fraud-count-to-transaction ratio (fraud chargeback rate)
The ratio of 3DS Mastercard payments to all Mastercard payments
The fraud chargeback rate uses a similar calculation to the chargeback rate found in ECM or HECM. The only difference is that the fraud chargeback rate is calculated using only fraudulent chargebacks. EFM applies to users who meet all of the following conditions:
Minimum of 1,000 e-commerce Mastercard payments
Net fraud volume is greater than 50,000 USD
Fraud chargeback rate is greater than 0.50%
Total 3DS Mastercard payment count is less than 10% of total Mastercard payment count
You can request that Mastercard suspend an assessed fine once during an open case, meaning that the request should happen when you' re confident you' ll be below thresholds in the next 3 consecutive months. If you request a suspension of fines, avoid identification in the next 2 months, but then exceed the thresholds in the following month, fine assessments would continue until you exit the program.
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