Bank of America is the second-largest bank in the US with over 68 million consumer and small business clients. If you've spotted an unauthorized charge, a billing error, or unfair fees on your account, here's how to dispute it and get your money back.
Types of Bank of America Disputes
Fraud and Unauthorized Transactions
- Credit card charges you didn't make
- Debit card transactions from a stolen card or compromised number
- Unauthorized ACH debits or wire transfers
- Zelle payments you didn't authorize
Merchant Disputes
- Charged for products never delivered
- Items significantly different from description
- Double-charged for a single purchase
- Charged after canceling a subscription
- Merchant refused a valid refund request
Fee Disputes
- Overdraft fees ($35 per transaction)
- Monthly maintenance fees
- Foreign transaction fees
- Wire transfer charges
- Returned item fees
Step-by-Step: Dispute a BofA Charge
Step 1: Use Online or Mobile Banking
- Log into bankofamerica.com or the BofA mobile app
- Go to your account activity
- Find and select the transaction
- Click "Dispute this transaction"
- Answer the guided questions about the issue
- Submit any supporting documents
Step 2: Call BofA Directly
- Credit card disputes: 1-866-266-0212
- Debit card/checking fraud: 1-800-432-1000
- General customer service: 1-800-432-1000
Key points when calling:
- Have your account number and transaction details ready
- Specify whether it's fraud (unauthorized) or a merchant dispute
- Request a provisional credit immediately
- Ask for a case reference number
Step 3: Timeline and Process
- Provisional credit: Usually within 1-5 business days for fraud
- Investigation period: Up to 60 days for credit cards, 10-45 days for debit cards
- Documentation deadline: Submit evidence within the timeframe BofA specifies
- Final resolution: Written notification of the outcome
Step 4: Fee Reversal Strategy
For overdraft and maintenance fees:
- Call 1-800-432-1000
- Be polite: "I noticed a $35 overdraft fee and I'd like to request a courtesy reversal."
- Mention your relationship: "I've been a customer for [X years]."
- First requests are granted most of the time
- If denied, ask for a supervisor
Step 5: Escalate When Needed
If BofA denies your dispute unfairly:
- Appeal the decision: Request re-investigation with new evidence
- CFPB complaint: consumerfinance.gov — BofA must respond
- OCC complaint: occ.gov
- State banking commissioner: File a complaint with your state's regulator
- Small claims court: For amounts within your state's limit
Preventing Future Issues
- Set up transaction alerts for all purchases over $1
- Enable two-factor authentication
- Use virtual card numbers for online purchases (BofA offers this)
- Review statements weekly, not just monthly
- Freeze your debit card in the app when not in use
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Identify the transaction type (fraud vs. merchant dispute vs. fee)
- [ ] Start the dispute online or through the BofA app
- [ ] Call the appropriate number for follow-up
- [ ] Request provisional credit
- [ ] Submit documentation within the deadline
- [ ] For fees, request a courtesy reversal
- [ ] File CFPB complaint if unresolved
Bottom Line
Bank of America processes millions of disputes annually and their online system handles most cases efficiently. For fraud, you'll get a provisional credit within days. For fee reversals, the ask-and-you-shall-receive approach works well — particularly on first requests. CFPB complaints are your strongest escalation for stubborn issues.
Sources
- Bank of America dispute and claims process
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — dispute guidance







