Someone parks in your lot, pays at the kiosk, and leaves. Three weeks later they call their bank: “I don’t recognize this charge.” A dispute gets opened, and money starts moving in the wrong direction.
That’s a chargeback — and even though they’re rare in parking, each one costs you the transaction amount plus a $20–$100 processor fee. For operators running tight margins on thousands of small-dollar transactions, that adds up.
Here’s the good news: if your pay stations use EMV chip readers and P2PE encryption, most chargebacks never reach you — and the ones that do are easy to win.
How a Chargeback Actually Works
The process is the same whether it’s a $6 surface lot or a $45 airport garage:
- The cardholder calls their bank and disputes the charge
- The bank (card issuer) opens a case and gives the cardholder a provisional credit
- The issuer sends the dispute to your acquiring bank or payment processor
- Your processor notifies you and gives you a window to respond
What happens at step 4 depends entirely on why the parker disputed. There are really only three reasons — and EMV + P2PE handle each one differently.
“This Is Fraud — Someone Used My Card”
This is the dispute that used to hurt. A cardholder sees a parking charge they didn’t make — maybe their card was stolen, maybe a counterfeit copy was used. Under the old magnetic-swipe system, you’d eat the loss.
EMV changed that completely. Every chip transaction generates a unique cryptogram — a one-time authentication code that proves the physical card was present and verified at your reader. That code can’t be faked, copied, or replayed.
Under the EMV liability shift (enforced by all major card brands since the rollout and still the standard in 2026): if you processed the transaction through an EMV chip reader, the card issuer absorbs the fraud loss. Not you. Your processor often resolves these automatically — the cryptogram is the evidence, and it’s conclusive.
If you’re still running mag-stripe readers? The liability stays with you. You pay the full fraud amount plus the chargeback fee. That’s the shift working against you, and it’s the single strongest reason to upgrade.
“I Don’t Recognize This Charge”
This is the most common dispute in parking by a wide margin — and it has nothing to do with fraud. The cardholder sees “MPRK*0892” or “PAY1287734” on their statement and genuinely doesn’t know what it is. So they call the bank.
The prevention here is dead simple: set a clear merchant descriptor with your processor. Instead of a cryptic code, the statement reads “Hotel A - Parking” or “Downtown Garage - Lot B.” When people recognize the charge, they don’t dispute it. Problem solved before it starts.
If one still comes through, you respond with the transaction timestamp, location, amount, and the EMV verification record. That package wins representment in the vast majority of cases.
“I Was Overcharged” or “The Machine Double-Charged Me”
The rarest scenario. A parker claims the kiosk charged them for six hours when they parked for two, or that it processed their card twice.
Your defense: the transaction log from your parking management platform showing the rate schedule, the entry/exit timestamps, and the exact charges applied. EMV data confirms a single legitimate card-present transaction at that time and amount. Clean records win these disputes.