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Guest19023892 | 3 years ago

Credit card transactions are much easier to reverse. For example, I went to a restaurant and a few days later I noticed they double charged the bill. I called the restaurant, they wouldn't fix the issue, so I called the credit card company and it was quickly reversed. That doesn't happen with a debit card.

Credit cards also come with all sorts of benefits. You can easily get 1-2% off all purchases through cash-back or gift card rewards. You can get free insurance with car rentals. Many cards also offer an extra one year warranty on most purchases, so if you paid for your laptop or phone with your credit card and it dies just outside of the manufacturer warranty, you might still be covered.

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Nextgrid|3 years ago

> That doesn't happen with a debit card.

Citation needed.

The scenario you described will absolutely fall under most card networks' transaction dispute rules. In day-to-day spending a debit card is just as safe as a credit card when it comes to fraud or malicious merchants.

The only time a credit card will be better is grey areas where a card network dispute doesn't succeed, in which case the law in most countries forces the credit card provider to eat the loss. In some of those cases, the reason why a credit card chargeback succeeds is not necessarily because you are right (if you were, the dispute process would've succeeded anyway) but because the amount is too low for the issuer to care so they just eat it to not have to investigate and/or litigate the issue.