Unknown Charge on Your Card — How to Tell Fraud vs. a Legit Subscription

You see a charge you don’t recognize.

No alert. No context. Just a merchant name that means nothing.

And now you’re stuck on one question:

Is this fraud… or something you actually authorized and forgot?


Start Here: The 60-Second Reality Check

  • Is it pending or posted? Pending charges can disappear. Posted charges usually won’t.
  • Does the merchant name look “wrong”? Many subscriptions bill under a parent company or payment processor.
  • Is the amount typical for a subscription? If it matches a monthly pattern, treat it as recurring until proven otherwise.
  • Did you sign up for anything recently? Trials often convert quietly when the clock runs out.

Green Flags (Often Legit)

  • The charge matches a service you use (even if the name is different)
  • You find an email receipt, invoice, or account billing entry
  • The charge repeats on the same date each month
  • The merchant shows up inside Apple/Google/PayPal billing history

Red Flags (Treat as Fraud Until You Confirm)

  • Multiple small charges from different merchants you’ve never seen
  • A sudden “test” charge followed by a larger posted charge later
  • A location/country you never use appears on the transaction
  • You can’t find any matching account, email, or receipt anywhere

What to Do Next (In the Right Order)

  • Step 1: Search the exact merchant text from your statement (copy/paste it).
  • Step 2: Check Apple/Google/PayPal/Amazon billing history if you use them.
  • Step 3: Look for receipts in email using keywords: “receipt”, “invoice”, “subscription”, “trial”.
  • Step 4: If it still makes zero sense, contact your bank and ask if it’s a known descriptor or processor.

Rule of thumb: If you can’t tie the charge to an account, an email receipt, or a billing page, don’t “wait and see.”

That’s how small unknown charges turn into recurring surprises.