The Recognition Problem
Here is a scenario most merchants have experienced: a cardholder sees a charge on their bank statement from “ACME DGTL SVC 800-555-1234” and has no idea what it is. They don’t recognize it. They call their bank. The bank agent can’t tell them much either—all they see is the same cryptic descriptor. The cardholder says they don’t recognize the charge. The bank files a fraud report, or initiates a dispute, or both. The merchant just lost revenue on a legitimate sale.
This is not theoretical. Industry data consistently shows that a significant share of chargebacks filed as “fraud” are actually legitimate transactions that the cardholder did not recognize. The problem is not that the transaction was fraudulent. The problem is that the cardholder could not connect the charge on their statement to the purchase they actually made. The merchant descriptor was unhelpful, the amount looked unfamiliar, the timing seemed off, or the billing entity name did not match the brand the cardholder interacted with.
Ethoca Consumer Clarity exists to solve this problem—at the point where it starts.
What Is Ethoca Consumer Clarity?
Consumer Clarity is a transaction enrichment platform operated by Ethoca, a Mastercard company. It allows merchants to share detailed, branded purchase information with card-issuing banks, who then display that enriched data to cardholders through their banking app, online portal, or call center tools.
Instead of seeing “ACME DGTL SVC 800-555-1234,” the cardholder sees the merchant’s actual brand name, logo, store location, itemized purchase details, order date, and in some cases delivery status and digital receipts. The cardholder recognizes the charge. They close the app. No call to the bank, no fraud report, no dispute.
When a cardholder views a transaction in their banking app (or calls their bank about an unfamiliar charge), the issuer sends a real-time API request to Ethoca. Ethoca queries the merchant’s data and returns enriched transaction details—brand name, logo, itemized receipt, location, delivery status—while the cardholder is still looking at the charge. In many cases, the enriched data is displayed proactively in the banking app before the cardholder even questions the transaction.
The platform currently covers over 145 million merchant locations across 200+ countries. Recent additions include Smart Subscriptions (which let cardholders view and manage recurring charges directly in their banking app), digital receipt integration, and expanded real-time data fields.
Not Just Mastercard
This is the part that catches most merchants off guard. Ethoca is a Mastercard company—Mastercard acquired Ethoca in 2019—and that branding leads many merchants to assume Consumer Clarity only covers Mastercard transactions. That is not the case.
Consumer Clarity is designed to work across card networks. Any issuing bank can participate in the program regardless of which card brands they issue. When a merchant enrolls in Consumer Clarity, their enriched transaction data becomes available to participating issuers across networks—not just for Mastercard volume.
That said, network coverage is not uniform. Consumer Clarity’s deepest coverage is on Mastercard transactions, where issuer participation is highest. For merchants who want equivalent coverage on Visa transactions, the typical approach is to pair Consumer Clarity with Visa’s own transaction enrichment product, Verifi Order Insight. Together, the two platforms cover the majority of card transactions across both major networks.
If you enroll in Consumer Clarity thinking it only helps with Mastercard disputes, you are undervaluing it. The cross-network coverage means you get some dispute prevention on Visa, Amex, and Discover volume as well—though coverage depth varies by issuer. For maximum protection, pair Consumer Clarity (strongest on Mastercard) with Verifi Order Insight (strongest on Visa).
Consumer Clarity vs. Ethoca Alerts: Different Tools, Different Timing
Ethoca offers two merchant-facing products that are frequently confused. They are complementary, not interchangeable, and understanding the difference matters because they intervene at completely different points in the dispute lifecycle.
Ethoca Alerts are reactive. When a cardholder files a dispute with their issuer, the issuer sends an alert to the merchant (through Ethoca’s network) before the dispute formally becomes a chargeback. The merchant has a window—typically 24 to 72 hours—to issue a refund and prevent the chargeback from being filed. This prevents the chargeback fee and the ratio impact, but the merchant still loses the revenue. Alerts cover approximately 95% of Mastercard transactions and roughly 50% of Visa transactions.
Consumer Clarity is proactive. It enriches transaction data so the cardholder recognizes the charge before they ever contact their bank. No call to the bank means no fraud report, no TC40, no dispute, and no chargeback. The merchant retains the revenue and avoids all downstream costs.
| Consumer Clarity | Ethoca Alerts | |
|---|---|---|
| When it acts | Before the cardholder contacts their bank | After a dispute is filed, before it becomes a chargeback |
| Mechanism | Enriched transaction data in banking app | Alert notification to merchant with refund window |
| Revenue impact | Merchant retains the sale | Merchant refunds the sale to prevent chargeback |
| VAMP impact | Prevents TC40 and chargeback from being created | Prevents chargeback but TC40 may already be filed |
| Cost to merchant | Free through Ethoca (issuer-funded) | Per-alert fee (typically $15–$40) |
The layered approach works like this: Consumer Clarity prevents the initial confusion that leads to disputes. For the cases where a cardholder still contacts their bank despite enriched data, Ethoca Alerts give you a second line of defense. And for the chargebacks that make it through both layers, your representment process is your final opportunity to recover the transaction.