Stripe Froze Your WooCommerce Account? Here’s How to Recover
Store Security · Account Recovery
Your Processor Froze the Account. Now What?
A payment processor freeze, fund hold, or rolling reserve is one of the more disorienting things that can happen to a WooCommerce store. This guide explains what each action actually means, what to do in the first 24–48 hours, how to respond to information requests, how reserves work and when funds release, how to keep fulfilling orders while restricted, and when an account is genuinely recoverable versus effectively over.
You log in to your store and notice payouts haven’t landed. Or you get an email from Stripe, PayPal, or WooPayments saying your account has been “limited,” “placed under review,” or “restricted.” Or worse: processing stops entirely and a notice appears saying your funds are held. Your first instinct is probably to panic. Your second instinct is probably to write an urgent, emotional reply to whoever sent the email. Neither helps much.
What actually helps is understanding what type of action has been taken, why it was taken, and what the processor actually needs from you to resolve it. Most account restrictions are not permanent. Many are survivable with a measured, well-documented response. A few are not, and understanding which situation you’re in early matters more than the speed of your reply.
This is the recovery companion to our post on prevention. If you want to understand how to avoid these situations before they happen, read How to Avoid Getting Banned by Stripe, PayPal & Payment Processors first. This guide starts from the moment the freeze has already happened.
What is actually happening to your account
Processor actions sit on a spectrum. Knowing where your situation falls on that spectrum tells you how much urgency to apply and what your realistic options are.
Fund hold or payout pause
This is the most common and most survivable type of action. Your store continues processing payments normally, but your payout schedule changes — payouts go from daily to weekly, weekly to manual, or stop altogether for a review period. The money isn’t gone; it’s being held in your merchant balance pending review. This often happens automatically when something in your account profile triggers a risk flag: a volume spike, an unusual product category change, a cluster of recent disputes, or a documentation gap in your business verification.
A payout pause may or may not come with a notification. Some merchants discover it because their bank account stops receiving transfers, not because they received an email. If you’re on Stripe, check the Dashboard under Payouts — you’ll see the payout schedule and whether a hold is active. If you’re on WooPayments, the WooCommerce admin shows a similar status. PayPal shows holds under Account Limitations in your account settings.
Account limitation
A formal limitation restricts specific capabilities: you might be unable to send or receive payments above a certain amount, unable to process certain card types, or unable to withdraw funds until you complete a verification step. On PayPal, limitations often appear as a banner in your account with a specific list of steps to complete. On Stripe, limitations typically arrive by email and reference a specific policy section or documentation request.
Limitations are the processor’s way of saying: “we need more information before we’re comfortable with this level of activity.” They’re not punitive by design — they’re risk-management pauses. Responding promptly and completely is usually sufficient to lift them.
Account suspension or freeze
A suspension stops processing entirely. Your existing WooCommerce checkout may continue showing payment options but transactions will fail at the processor level, which can be confusing for customers and embarrassing to discover mid-checkout. Suspensions are more serious than limitations and typically indicate the processor has identified a specific triggering condition — elevated chargebacks in recent months, a policy violation, or a compliance concern that couldn’t be resolved through a limitation alone.
Rolling reserve
A rolling reserve doesn’t stop processing or payouts — it withholds a percentage of each payout for a defined holding period before releasing it. If your processor imposes a rolling reserve, you might see only 80–90% of each payout land in your bank account, with the retained portion releasing on a rolling 90-day or 180-day lag. The withheld funds are real money that will eventually reach you; the practical effect is a sustained reduction in working capital. Rolling reserves are common for new merchants, merchants in high-risk categories, or merchants coming out of a chargeback spike. Check your specific processor agreement for the exact terms — reserve percentages and durations vary and your processor should document them in your account settings or merchant agreement.
Account termination
Termination is the permanent closure of your merchant account. It typically comes with a notice period — often 30 days — during which your funds are settled and held, and then released after a further holding period (typically 90–180 days, depending on your processor’s terms) to cover any chargebacks that may arrive against transactions processed before closure. Termination may result in a MATCH list entry (also called the Terminated Merchant File), which can make opening new accounts with other processors more difficult for a period of time. This is the situation you most want to avoid escalating toward.
Read the notice before doing anything else
Every processor action comes with a specific reason, even if that reason is stated vaguely. Before you draft a reply or call support, read the full communication carefully. Note the specific language used: “documentation request,” “policy review,” “unusual activity,” “chargeback ratio,” or “prohibited business category” all point toward different root causes and different responses. Responding to the wrong thing wastes time you may not have.
The first 24–48 hours: what to do immediately
The early window after a processor action sets the tone for the entire resolution process. Processors watch how merchants respond — and how quickly. A measured, professional, prompt response signals that you’re an operator who takes compliance seriously. An emotional, delayed, or defensive response signals the opposite.
1. Identify exactly what type of action has been taken
Log in to your processor’s dashboard and read every active notice carefully. Is this a documentation request, a limitation, a suspension, or a termination notice? The response strategy differs significantly depending on which type you’re dealing with. Don’t rely on the subject line of an email to tell you — go directly to the dashboard and read the full account status.
2. Check whether your store is still processing
A payout hold is very different from a processing freeze. If payouts are paused but processing is active, your customers can still buy and your store is still running. If processing is suspended, customers will encounter failed payment attempts — which damages trust and loses revenue in real time. Determine this first so you can decide whether an emergency backup processor is needed immediately.
3. Identify the root cause before you respond
Processors typically give you a reason: a chargeback ratio concern, a documentation gap, an unusual volume spike, a product category issue, or a specific policy section. Pull your own data before responding — look at your dispute rate over the past two to three months, review any recent volume changes, and check whether anything in your product catalog might have raised a category flag. You need to understand the cause before you can credibly respond to it.
4. Respond promptly and in writing — within 24 hours if possible
Use the processor’s official channel (dashboard ticket system, secure email thread, or their support portal — not a general phone line). Acknowledge the communication, confirm you’re taking it seriously, and state clearly that you’re gathering the requested documentation. If you need 24–48 more hours to pull together evidence, say so explicitly. Silence is the worst response.
5. Do not open a second account to route around the restriction
This is a very common mistake and a very serious one. Opening a secondary account with the same processor — or a closely affiliated one — while your primary account is under review or restriction violates most processors’ terms of service. If discovered, it typically results in both accounts being terminated and a higher probability of a MATCH list entry. If you need a backup processor, the right time to open one is before any issues arise, not during them.
How to respond to an information request
Documentation requests are the most common trigger for account limitations. Processors ask for documentation when something in your account profile doesn’t match what they expect to see — or when your business crosses a threshold that requires additional verification. These requests feel bureaucratic but they’re answerable. The goal is to give the processor everything they’ve asked for, clearly organized, so their review team can process it without needing follow-up questions.
What processors commonly ask for
The specifics vary by processor and by the trigger that prompted the review, but common requests include:
- Business registration documents — articles of incorporation, business license, or equivalent for your jurisdiction
- Proof of identity — government-issued ID for account owners or directors, typically required for accounts above certain volume thresholds or when the account owner information changes
- Bank account verification — voided check, bank letter, or recent statement showing account name and number matching the business
- Product or supplier documentation — invoices, supplier agreements, or proof of authorized reseller status, often requested when your product category raises a concern about genuine commerce versus gray-market goods
- Fulfillment evidence — shipping confirmations, tracking numbers, delivery records, or screenshots from your logistics provider covering a recent sample of orders
- Refund and return policy — a clear written policy, especially if your dispute rate has elevated
- Website and marketing materials — screenshots of your store, product pages, and any promotional materials, particularly if there’s a concern about how products are described or marketed
How to structure your response
Treat your response the way you’d treat a professional audit response, not a customer service email. Be specific, organized, and complete. Label each document clearly so the reviewer doesn’t have to guess what they’re looking at. If the processor asked for three things, provide exactly those three things in the order they were requested, clearly labeled. Don’t bury the requested documents in a long narrative explanation.
Do include a short, factual cover statement that explains your business context — what you sell, how long you’ve been operating, why you believe the current situation arose, and what you’re doing to address the underlying concern if there is one. Keep it to a paragraph. Processors see a lot of account reviews and they respond better to organized, concise submissions than to lengthy justifications.
Over-deliver on documentation
If the processor asked for three months of order history, provide four. If they asked for one supplier invoice, provide two. A complete, confident submission that goes slightly beyond the minimum signals a legitimate, well-run operation. An exactly-minimum submission that requires follow-up questions delays resolution and invites more scrutiny.
If the request is vague or the reason is unclear
Sometimes processor communications are frustratingly general — “your account has been flagged for review” without a specific explanation. In that case, ask directly: request a specific description of the concern and a list of what documentation they need. Don’t guess and submit a random assortment of documents, because it wastes everyone’s time. Ask, then organize your response around the answer.
Keep records of every communication
Screenshot or save every message thread, every document submission, and every timestamp. If the situation escalates or if you need to reference earlier conversations in a later appeal, having a complete record is the difference between being able to make a clear case and having to reconstruct a vague recollection. This applies even to phone calls — follow up any verbal conversation with a brief written summary sent through the processor’s official channel.
How rolling and fixed reserves work
Reserves are one of the less well-understood aspects of processor relationships — partly because the specifics vary significantly between processors and are buried in merchant agreements that most people don’t read until after something goes wrong.
Rolling reserves
A rolling reserve withholds a percentage of each payout for a defined rolling period before releasing it. The mechanics work like this: if your processor withholds 10% of each week’s payouts for a 90-day rolling period, then in week one you receive 90% of that week’s settlements, and the held 10% is released in week thirteen (90 days later). By the time the rolling period is fully established, you’re receiving 100% of your settlements again — 90% of the current week plus 10% of the settlement from 90 days ago — but your working capital is structurally reduced by the size of the reserve. The exact percentage and duration of your reserve should be stated in your processor’s account terms or in the notice that established the reserve. If it isn’t clear, ask.
Fixed reserves
A fixed reserve holds a specific dollar amount out of your merchant account — not a percentage of each payout, but a fixed pool. Processors may sweep payouts until that pool is funded, then release payouts normally. Fixed reserves are less common than rolling reserves but do appear in some high-risk or elevated-concern situations. They typically release after a defined period of sustained good performance — lower chargeback rates, clean dispute history — but again, the exact terms depend on your agreement.
When do reserves release?
Rolling reserves release automatically when the holding period expires, assuming the account is still in good standing. Fixed reserves typically require a review — either automatic based on time elapsed or triggered by a formal request you make to the processor after demonstrating sustained improvement. In some cases, demonstrating a sustained drop in your chargeback ratio over two to three months is the practical requirement for getting a reserve reduced or lifted before its scheduled end date. Your processor should be able to tell you what the release conditions are; if they haven’t volunteered that information, ask directly.
Your processor agreement is the authoritative source
Reserve percentages, durations, and release conditions are set by your individual processor agreement — not by industry-wide standards. The numbers above describe common patterns, not guaranteed specifics. Read your own agreement. If you can’t find the relevant clauses, contact your processor’s merchant support directly and ask them to point you to the specific section that covers reserve policy. Do this now, not when you need the information urgently.
Cash flow management during a reserve
A rolling reserve reduces your effective working capital for its entire duration. If you rely on daily or weekly payout cycles to fund inventory reorders, shipping costs, or operating expenses, a reserve can create genuine cash-flow pressure even when the underlying business is performing well. Plan for this. If you know a reserve has been placed, forecast your cash flow at the reduced payout rate and identify which expenses need to be covered from reserve funds rather than current payouts. The held funds will return — but your operations need to survive until they do.
Keeping orders moving while your account is restricted
The practical urgency of an account restriction depends on whether your store is still processing. If processing is active but payouts are paused, your customers are unaffected and the immediate operational problem is cash flow, not sales. If processing is suspended, you have a more acute problem: customers are trying to buy and failing, which damages trust and loses revenue in real time.
If processing is still active
Keep operating normally. Customers experience nothing unusual. Your focus is on the compliance side — responding to the processor, gathering documentation, and monitoring your dispute rate. There’s no need to communicate the restriction to customers unless you choose to; most short-term holds resolve without customers ever knowing anything happened.
If processing is suspended
You need an alternative payment path as quickly as possible. Your options depend on what you set up before the restriction:
- If you have an active secondary processor already configured in WooCommerce — enable it as the primary gateway immediately. This is the cleanest path and the reason having a secondary processor active in normal times is genuinely useful rather than just theoretical. WooCommerce supports multiple active payment gateways simultaneously; switching the priority is a few clicks in WooCommerce → Settings → Payments.
- If you have no backup processor — your options narrow considerably. You can apply for a new merchant account with a different processor, but new applications take time — often days to a week or more for review, especially if your account profile includes recent dispute activity. This is not a same-day solution. PayPal can sometimes be approved more quickly for basic processing if you have a personal PayPal account you can upgrade; WooPayments requires a fresh review if you weren’t already using it. You may also consider bank transfer payment options for existing or repeat customers as a temporary measure while a new account is approved.
- If you have open orders that were placed before the suspension — fulfill them using whatever payment you already collected. A processor suspension doesn’t retroactively cancel existing processed transactions; those funds are already captured. Continue fulfillment normally for orders where payment cleared before the suspension took effect.
Customer communication
If your store is visibly affected — customers encountering payment failures or processing errors — you have a decision to make about transparency. You don’t need to disclose the processor situation specifically. An honest, low-detail message (“we’re experiencing a technical issue with our payment processing and working to resolve it — please try again shortly or contact us directly”) covers the practical need without inviting questions you may not want to answer publicly. Update this message as soon as normal processing resumes.
For customers who reach out directly during the disruption, be responsive and honest within limits. Offer alternatives where you can (direct bank transfer for high-trust repeat customers, invoice-based payment for B2B relationships). Don’t make promises about timelines you can’t keep.
When an account is recoverable versus effectively closed
Not every processor action is recoverable, and spending weeks trying to appeal a decision that was effectively final wastes time you could spend building alternative arrangements. Knowing early which situation you’re in is valuable.
Signs an account is likely recoverable
- The processor’s communication specifically asks for documentation or information — this is a clear signal they want to continue the relationship
- The triggering issue is a chargeback rate spike that traces to a specific, identifiable cause (a bad product batch, a fulfillment partner failure, a promotional miscommunication) rather than a sustained structural problem
- Your volume and product category are within normal commercial ranges — you’re not operating in a genuinely prohibited space
- This is your first significant account action after a clean history — processors give more benefit of the doubt to merchants with previously good standing
- The processor assigns you a case manager or a specific point of contact for the resolution — this typically indicates an active review process rather than an automated closure
Signs an account may not be recoverable
- The communication uses language like “terminated,” “permanently closed,” or references a specific policy violation without offering a documentation path to resolve it
- Your account was flagged for a genuinely prohibited category — this typically can’t be appealed regardless of your history or how you respond
- You receive a final settlement notice specifying when held funds will be released — this language usually accompanies termination rather than review
- Multiple follow-up messages receive automated or templated responses with no movement toward resolution over several weeks
- You’ve received MATCH list notification or confirmation — while MATCH entries can sometimes be challenged and corrected if they were placed in error, they’re difficult to reverse when placed for legitimate compliance reasons
Consider consulting a payments attorney for terminations
If your account has been terminated with a significant amount of funds held, or if you believe you’ve been placed on the MATCH list incorrectly, it can be worth consulting an attorney who specializes in payment processing disputes. This is not a casual suggestion — it’s specific to situations where a large amount of money is at stake or where an incorrect MATCH entry is materially affecting your ability to operate. The cost of a consultation is usually less than the cost of months of confusion during a self-managed appeal.
If the account is effectively terminated
Accepting that an account is gone — rather than spending months in fruitless appeals — is often the more productive path. Your energy is better spent on: applying with alternative processors (including processors who specialize in your product category if it’s high-risk), building a complete documentation package that tells your business story clearly for the next application, and understanding what specifically triggered the termination so you don’t recreate the same conditions on a new account.
When applying with new processors after a termination, be transparent about your history. Processors query the MATCH list and Terminated Merchant File; they will find the prior termination. Disclosing it proactively — with a clear, factual explanation of what happened and what you’ve changed — is almost always received better than having them discover it after you’ve omitted it. It’s also the honest approach.
Reducing single-processor dependency going forward
This section applies whether your current situation is resolved or you’re starting fresh. A single-processor setup is a single point of failure for your WooCommerce store’s revenue stream, and this incident is the demonstration of why that matters. Going forward, treating processor diversification as a basic operational requirement — not a nice-to-have — is the correct lesson to take from this experience.
Maintain a second processor as standard practice
WooCommerce supports multiple payment gateways active simultaneously. Running Stripe alongside PayPal, or WooPayments alongside a secondary gateway, gives your customers two paths to complete a transaction and gives you a functioning revenue channel if either account has a temporary issue. The revenue you route through each processor also builds transaction history on both accounts — which matters when an application is reviewed and helps establish a longer track record with alternative providers.
The best time to apply for a second processor account is when your primary account is healthy and your dispute history is clean. Applications reviewed with no recent account issues, a clean dispute rate, and a clear business profile go through faster and with fewer documentation requests than applications filed in the middle of or immediately after a restriction. If you’re currently recovering from a freeze, apply for the secondary processor now — even if the primary account resolves — and operate with both going forward.
Know your merchant agreement before you need it
Every processor’s merchant agreement covers: payout schedule, reserve policy, category restrictions, termination conditions and notice periods, and what happens to funds held at account closure. Most merchants never read this document until something goes wrong. That’s the wrong time to read it.
Spend thirty minutes with your agreement now. Find the sections on reserves, termination, and fund-release timelines. Bookmark the processor’s support documentation on account limitations and what triggers them. Understanding these terms before an issue arises means you can respond from a position of knowledge rather than scrambling to interpret legal language under stress.
For a broader picture of what triggers processor actions in the first place — and how to maintain the kind of account standing that keeps your chargeback ratio out of the danger zone — the companion post How to Avoid Getting Banned by Stripe, PayPal & Payment Processors covers the prevention side in detail.
The chargeback ratio connection
The single most common underlying cause of processor account actions — across freezes, reserves, limitations, and terminations alike — is an elevated chargeback ratio. Chargebacks are the primary metric payment processors and card networks use to assess account health, and almost every account action can be traced either directly to the chargeback rate or to fraud patterns that generate chargebacks downstream.
If your account is currently under restriction, your chargeback ratio is the first number to pull. If it’s elevated, understand why — which orders generated disputes, which customers filed them, and whether there’s a pattern (a product, a customer segment, a fulfillment partner, a promotional campaign) that drove the spike. Demonstrating to your processor that you’ve identified the root cause and addressed it is the most compelling thing you can put in your response documentation.
Knowing your ratio before the processor tells you
The frustrating reality about chargeback ratios is that they’re lagging indicators. The disputes you’re seeing in your processor dashboard today came from transactions processed 30–90 days ago. By the time your ratio has climbed enough to trigger a processor action, the transactions that caused it are already weeks old. The only way to catch a ratio problem before it reaches the threshold that triggers an account action is to track it continuously — not check it quarterly, not look at it when something feels off, but watch it as a running metric.
TrustLens (free version) shows a Chargeback Ratio Speedometer on the dashboard — a blended monthly chargeback ratio with a Healthy / Approaching / Action-needed status keyed to Visa VDMP/VFMP, Mastercard ECP, Amex, and Discover monitoring program thresholds. For stores using Stripe or WooPayments, disputes ingest automatically with no manual data entry — the ratio stays current as disputes arrive. For PayPal and other gateways, disputes are entered manually through a form on the order edit screen and the ratio is recalculated accordingly. The speedometer doesn’t make decisions for you; it makes sure you’re never surprised by where your ratio stands.
If you’re in a processor restriction right now because of a chargeback rate that climbed before you noticed, the Chargeback Ratio Speedometer is the tool that makes sure you see the next problem coming instead of discovering it through a restriction notice. Per-customer dispute history in TrustLens also shows which customers have filed chargebacks previously — useful for identifying whether repeat-disputer behavior is contributing to your ratio and whether those customers should be reviewed or blocked from future orders.
For a full breakdown of how customer risk scoring works and what the behavioral signals mean, see How WooCommerce Customer Risk Scoring Works (and How to Read the Signals). For a complete guide to handling individual chargeback disputes — evidence gathering, deadlines, and when to fight versus accept — see How to Handle WooCommerce Chargebacks & Disputes: A Store Owner’s Guide.
Key takeaways
What to take from this guide
- Identify the action type first. Payout hold, account limitation, suspension, rolling reserve, and termination are meaningfully different situations with different responses. Determine which one you’re dealing with before doing anything else.
- Respond in writing, within 24 hours. Silence reads as disengagement. A prompt, measured response — even if it just acknowledges the notice and confirms you’re gathering documentation — sets the right tone for the resolution process.
- Over-deliver on documentation. Organize the requested documents clearly, label everything, and go slightly beyond the minimum. A confident, complete submission resolves faster than a minimum submission that requires follow-up questions.
- Do not open a second account to route around a restriction. This typically results in both accounts being terminated and increases the probability of a MATCH list entry. Apply for a legitimate backup processor openly, not secretly.
- Understand reserve mechanics before your funds are held. Rolling reserves release on a defined schedule. Fixed reserves often require a formal request after sustained performance improvement. Know your specific terms from your merchant agreement.
- Know whether your account is recoverable. Documentation requests and case managers signal a review process. Final settlement notices and prohibited-category violations typically don’t. Spending months on a futile appeal is expensive — knowing early lets you move to alternative arrangements faster.
- Your chargeback ratio is the root cause to address. Whether you’re responding to a current restriction or preventing the next one, the chargeback rate is the metric that matters most. Track it continuously, not reactively.
- Set up a secondary processor before you need one. The best time to apply for a backup merchant account is when your primary account is healthy. An application filed mid-restriction is a harder case to make.
Common questions
How long does a Stripe account freeze typically last?
Stripe doesn’t publish a standard timeline, and in practice durations vary widely depending on the trigger. A documentation request that you respond to completely and promptly might resolve in 2–5 business days. A chargeback-ratio review may take 2–4 weeks, during which Stripe monitors whether your ratio is improving. A more complex review involving prohibited categories or significant volume anomalies can take longer. The best way to influence the timeline is a complete first submission — every round of follow-up questions adds days. Incomplete or delayed responses are the most common reason for extended freezes.
Can PayPal freeze my account if my chargeback rate is high?
Yes. PayPal’s Seller Protection program and its broader account management framework both include chargeback ratio monitoring. PayPal will place account limitations and holds for elevated dispute rates, unusual transaction patterns, or policy concerns — similar in structure to how Stripe and traditional acquiring banks handle these situations, though the specific thresholds and processes are documented in PayPal’s User Agreement and Acceptable Use Policy rather than in publicly detailed card-network program frameworks. Check PayPal’s current documentation and your account’s Resolution Center for your specific account status if you suspect a limitation has been placed.
Will my customers see payment failures during an account freeze?
It depends on the type of action. If payouts are paused but processing is still active, customers experience nothing unusual — their purchases go through normally, and the change only affects when funds reach your bank account. If processing is suspended, customers will see payment failures at checkout — typically a generic “payment declined” or “unable to process” message. In that case, activating an alternative payment gateway as quickly as possible is the priority. If you have a secondary processor already configured in WooCommerce, re-prioritizing it is a quick settings change. If not, the setup time for a new merchant account is the real constraint.
What is the MATCH list and how does it affect me?
MATCH (Mastercard Alert to Control High-Risk Merchants), also known as the Terminated Merchant File (TMF), is a database maintained by Mastercard that payment processors query before approving new merchant accounts. When a processor terminates a merchant account for specific reasons — primarily excessive chargebacks, fraud, or serious policy violations — they may place the merchant on MATCH. Entries typically persist for five years. Being on MATCH doesn’t mean you can never process payments again, but it does mean that most major processors will flag your application. Some processors who specialize in high-risk merchant accounts will work with merchants who have MATCH entries, though typically at higher fees and reserve requirements. If you believe you’ve been placed on MATCH incorrectly, the process to dispute it runs through the processor who placed the entry — MATCH itself doesn’t accept corrections directly.
How long will Stripe or PayPal hold my funds after account closure?
Hold periods after account termination vary by processor and by the specific circumstances of the closure, but 90–180 days is a common range. The purpose of the hold is to cover any chargebacks that may arrive for transactions processed before the closure — processors remain liable for those disputes even after the account is closed, so they retain funds as a buffer. The exact duration and conditions for release should be stated in your merchant agreement under the account termination or fund-disbursement section. If you’re facing a termination, reading this clause now is worthwhile — and asking your processor directly for the specific release timeline in writing gives you something concrete to plan around.
Does filing a dispute with my processor against their decision help?
Filing an escalation or appeal can be useful in specific circumstances — particularly if a MATCH entry was placed incorrectly, if a policy decision was applied to the wrong account due to an error, or if the triggering documentation for an account review wasn’t properly considered. However, appeals rarely succeed against decisions based on genuine chargeback ratio violations or substantiated policy breaches, because the underlying data supports the processor’s position. The most effective “appeal” for a chargeback-ratio restriction is demonstrating sustained improvement in your ratio over the weeks following the restriction — that gives the processor evidence that the root cause has been addressed. A formal appeal of the restriction decision itself, without accompanying performance improvement, typically doesn’t move the outcome.
Watch your chargeback ratio before it triggers the next notice
TrustLens (free) shows a live Chargeback Ratio Speedometer on the dashboard — blended monthly ratio with Healthy / Approaching / Action-needed status keyed to Visa, Mastercard, Amex, and Discover thresholds. Disputes from Stripe and WooPayments ingest automatically. Per-customer dispute history and the Advanced Chargeback Monitor with per-brand breakdown, daily ratio alerts, and Dispute Evidence Reports are Pro features.