One-case comparison
Chargeflow alternative for one high-value chargeback
Chargeflow publishes success-based pricing of 25% per recovered chargeback. The Fabler Labs pilot charges $49 once for a case-specific evidence review, whether the issuer reverses the dispute or not.
These offers are not identical. Compare scope, access, and risk before choosing.
Published-fee arithmetic
What 25% means at your dispute amount
Enter the amount at stake. The calculator shows the success fee if the full amount is recovered. It does not estimate win probability, partial recovery, or total platform cost.
Source checked July 11, 2026: Chargeflow pricing states “25% per recovered chargeback.” Its Shopify App Store listing reports the same automation fee.
Success-fee calculator
- 25% if fully recovered
- $250.00
- Fabler one-case review
- $49.00
- Fee difference
- $201.00
At $1,000, 25% is $250.00.
Choose based on the work, not only the fee
| Need | Fabler $49 pilot | Chargeflow automation |
|---|---|---|
| Number of disputes | One accepted $500+ case | Ongoing dispute management |
| Store or processor access | None; you upload selected records | Platform integration |
| Output | Cited timeline, rebuttal draft, exhibit index, missing-evidence checklist | Automated chargeback management and submission |
| Who submits | You review and submit | Service manages the workflow |
| Price basis | $49 paid before review | 25% per recovered chargeback |
| Outcome promise | No recovery guarantee | See provider terms and eligibility |
Chargeflow is likely the better fit when
- You want ongoing automation across many disputes.
- You want a service integrated with your commerce stack.
- You prefer success-based pricing over an upfront review fee.
The Fabler pilot may fit when
- You have one documented dispute worth at least $500.
- You do not want to connect a store or processor account.
- You can review and submit a drafted response yourself.
Request a $49 pilot review
Not legal or financial advice. Evidence quality, deadlines, card-network rules, and issuer decisions affect outcomes.