failed payment feedback

Failed Payment Feedback: How to Recover Customers and Improve Checkout

26.05.2026

A failed payment in e-commerce is rarely just a technical status in the operator's panel. It is the moment when the customer was already close to the purchase, but the whole process stopped at the most sensitive point: at money, security and trust in the store.

Key lessons for busy people

If you manage checkout, CX or customer service, treat payment errors as a source of data, not just as lost transactions. This is when feedback is freshest and easiest to understand what is realistically blocking the completion of a purchase.

  • A failed payment is a critical moment in the customer journey: a threat to conversion, but also an opportunity to win back the customer before they move on to a competitor.
  • Payment logs alone are not enough. A status of "declined," "timeout" or "error" shows what happened, but doesn't explain whether the problem was technical issues, lack of trust, an error message, additional costs or lack of a preferred payment method.
  • A quick response, a clear message, an alternative payment method and a saved shopping cart significantly increase the chances of completing the sales process.
  • Recovering a customer after a failed payment requires automating real-time contact and removing barriers to the buying process.
  • Systematic learning from feedback, or closed-loop feedback, helps lower checkout abandonment rate and increase customer satisfaction.

Introduction: failed payment as the moment of truth in the customer journey

In an online store, a failed payment refers to a situation in which a customer cannot successfully pay for an order. It could be a declined card payment, a problem with 3DS/SCA, a payment gateway error, a session timeout, a failed confirmation in the banking app, or a user giving up after seeing the last checkout step.

From a business perspective, this is a doubly costly moment. First, there is the risk of lost revenue. Second, trust in the store drops, because the customer doesn't always know if the money has been collected, if the order has been saved and if he should try again. This directly affects sales performance, quality of service and customer relations.

According to a Baymard Institute analysis, the average percentage of abandoned shopping carts is 70.19%, which directly translates into lost revenue. The average percentage of abandoned shopping carts in online stores is 70.19%, which translates into significant financial losses for e-commerce. Some of these abandonments are due to problems in the last steps of the purchase path, including payment errors, unclear costs and an overly difficult process.

An optimized checkout process is a key element affecting the effectiveness of an e-commerce store, because the more customers complete the checkout process, the greater the store's effectiveness. A transparent and hassle-free transaction process drives higher conversion rates, but it requires looking beyond the payment technology.

This article is for e-commerce managers, CX managers, digital managers, product owners and customer care teams. We'll go from customer emotions, to collecting feedback after an error, to specific actions, metrics and closed-loop feedback that help improve checkout in a data-driven way.

Why does a customer abandon a purchase after a payment error?

After a payment error, a customer is in a peculiar state: he or she was ready to buy a product or service, but encountered a barrier. In this situation, what matters is not only the error itself, but also how the store explains it, whether it minimizes the effort, and whether it gives a clear path to finalize the order.

The following reasons for abandoning a purchase are the most common:

  • Emotions and loss of a sense of control. The customer may feel frustration, uncertainty, concern about double-charging the card, fear of getting their money back, or lack of trust in the online store. If the message sounds technical, such as "auth error 05," the user is only interested in one thing: what happens to his money now?
  • Payment and banking problems. Typical scenarios include a declined card, no funds, an expired session, a 3DS/SCA confirmation problem, a BLIK error, a transaction limit, a bank block, a problem depending on the type of card, or temporary operator unavailability.
  • Technical problems. A payment gateway error, a timeout, a malfunctioning redirect, a lack of confirmation after returning from the bank, or a hung screen after clicking "pay" can cause a customer to give up, even if their shopping needs are still valid.
  • UX of checkout. Checkouts that are too complicated or time-consuming can discourage customers, leading to shopping cart abandonment. Problems can include overly long forms, illegible buttons, no purchase without an account, deletion of entered data after an error, or failure to adapt the checkout to mobile devices.
  • Offer and cost. A customer may abandon a shopping cart if only at the end does he see additional delivery costs, no free return, a problem with a discount code or no method he expected. Offering a "Buy now, pay later" option can increase e-commerce conversions, especially at higher cart values.
  • Communication and trust. A vague error message, lack of information on whether funds have been collected, lack of visible logos of trusted payment operators and lack of easy contact with support can make the customer walk away even though he originally wanted to buy.

In practice, without talking to the customer, it is difficult to distinguish between a technical error and a psychological barrier. The same payment status can mean both a real refusal by the bank and a situation in which the customer was frightened by the message, closed the site and went to a competitor.

What won't transaction data alone tell you about the problem?

Transaction data is necessary, but not sufficient. Payment status, payment method, amount, error code and attempt time show what happened in the system. However, they don't show why the customer didn't try again, what he felt and what decisions he made after seeing the error.

Example: two shopping carts end up with the same error code after a card payment. In the first case, the bank rejected the transaction because of the limit. In the second, the customer didn't go through the confirmation in the app because he didn't understand why he had to leave the store's website. In the third case, the bank says the transaction was only temporarily blocked, but the customer doesn't know what that means and writes to support for complaints.

The limitations of the data itself can be seen in several areas in particular:

The source of the data

What it shows

What it does not show

PSP logs

Status, error code, method, amount

Customer emotion, trust, message understanding

GA4 / web analytics

Abandonment stage, path, traffic source

Reason for abandonment and subjective evaluation of the process

Heatmaps and session recordings

Clicks, scroll, hesitation

Concerns about security, recovery, quality of service

Ticket system

Support contacts

Those customers who did not write and simply gave up

Behavioral analytics can show that users stop when choosing to pay. However, it won't tell whether they couldn't find BLIK, were afraid of redirection, a discount code didn't work, or simply the extra cost changed their assessment of the value of the offer.

Therefore, feedback after a failed payment should combine quantitative data with Voice of Customer. Combining logs, PSP data, GA4, shopping cart information and customer comments allows you to see the entire process, not just the technical outcome.

How to collect feedback after a failed payment?

Feedback should be collected when the customer remembers the details. Brief notifications after a declined transaction can catch the customer's attention while emotions are still fresh. At the same time, quick response and minimizing customer effort are key to collecting valuable feedback after payment problems.

The best points of contact are:

1. Micro-survey in checkout after an error

When a payment error is detected, you can display a short survey in the checkout interface. It should not block further action or prolong frustration.

Good format:

  • 1 closed question,
  • 1 open-ended question,
  • 30-40 seconds maximum,
  • possibility to skip,
  • no questions about card details, PIN, passwords, SMS codes or authorization details.

Example:

What prevented you from completing the payment?
No payment method / technical error / unintelligible message / problem with the bank / other.

2. Recovery email

Automatic email campaigns that remind users of abandoned shopping carts can be effective, especially when they are personalized and include direct links to return to the cart. In the case of a payment error, the first message should arrive quickly, such as within 5-15 minutes.

Such an e-mail should include:

  • a clear message that the payment failed,
  • a link to repeat the payment,
  • saved order or shopping cart,
  • an option to choose another method,
  • a brief question about the reason for the aborted process,
  • contact to support.

Text messages can also work, but should be used carefully, in accordance with marketing and transactional consents. Multi-channel communication with the customer increases the chance of a response after an unsaid transaction.

3. Form after an abandoned shopping cart

If a customer has not returned to checkout, a form can be sent after 24 hours. Collecting feedback from customers who have abandoned a shopping cart can help identify barriers to the shopping process and make appropriate improvements.

It is important that the response does not require an account login. If a customer has to retrieve their password first to tell you why they didn't buy, they probably won't respond.

4. Chat and live channels

Chat on the site, WhatsApp, Messenger or phone contact are more important when the customer does not know if the funds have been collected. At such a time, quick access to a human being can save the order.

The message may read:

Doubt if the payment has been collected? Write to us - we will check the status of the order and help you complete the purchase.

5. Customer service and ticket system

Every contact regarding payment should be tagged in the ticket system. Categories may include: "payment error", "problem with 3DS", "no payment method", "status of funds", "problem with discount code", "chargeback", "complaints".

Social media contacts are also worth considering. Some customers will not write an email, but will comment on the problem under the store's post or in a private message.

6. NPS, CSAT and CES after purchase

Comments from NPS, CSAT and CES surveys can reveal problems not seen in the checkout itself. The Customer Effort Score, or CES, is particularly useful because it measures customer effort. Customer Effort Score (CES) is a key metric for technical problems related to payments.

Collecting customer feedback should be done up to two weeks after the sales process is completed to get as much detailed information as possible. After this time, the retailer's memory fades and his opinion becomes more general.

Remember: feedback should be about experience, barriers and evaluation of the process, not sensitive data. We do not collect card numbers, PINs, SMS codes or passwords. Security and RODO compliance are important in every situation.

What questions to ask customers after a checkout problem?

A good question after a payment error should be short, neutral and tailored to the context. A different set will work in a pop-up after an error, another in a recovery email, and another in a consultant-led conversation.

You can use the following set:

Open-ended questions

  • What prevented you from completing the payment?
  • What caused you to not complete your order in our store?
  • What could we improve to make it easier to complete your purchase?

True feedback requires deepening the conversation with the customer to understand exactly what worked in the sales process and what needs improvement. If the customer responds with "payment doesn't work," it's worth asking further whether it was the bank, card, BLIK, message, mobile app or lack of a preferred option.

Questions about the error message

  • Was the payment error message clear to you?
  • Did you know what to do after the error appeared?
  • Was the information about the status of the funds sufficient?

Format: yes / no / partially short comment field.

Questions about payment methods

  • Did you find your preferred payment method?
  • Which method did you try to pay with?
  • Did you miss a specific option, such as BLIK, quick transfer, digital wallet, deferred payment?

It's a good idea to link these answers to transaction data, but without asking the customer for details of card type, card number or account details.

Indicator questions

  • How easy or difficult was it to complete the payment? Scale of 1-7.
  • How would you rate the clarity of information in the final checkout step?
  • How do you rate the feeling of security during payment?

Such ratings help track changes after optimization.

Support questions

  • Do you need help completing your purchase?
  • Do you want a consultant to contact you about your order?
  • Can we send you a link to renew your payment?

Segmentation questions

  • Was this your first attempt to purchase from us?
  • Have you purchased from our online store before?
  • Are you buying as an individual or a company?

This helps distinguish between new customers and returning customers. New customers often have a lower level of trust and are quicker to give up if a problem arises. Conversations with customers should be flexible and questions tailored to the context to get as much valuable information as possible.

How to analyze the causes of failed payments?

Simply gathering customer feedback is not enough. It is crucial to connect the feedback to a specific context: checkout stage, payment method, device type, browser, operating system, shopping cart value and traffic source.

The first step is to assign responses to operational data:

  • checkout stage: delivery, data, payment selection, authorization, return from bank,
  • payment method: card, BLIK, quick transfer, wallet, BNPL,
  • device: desktop, mobile, tablet,
  • browser and system,
  • country and language,
  • cart value,
  • customer segment,
  • traffic source: paid campaign, newsletter, social, organic, remarketing.

Next, it is useful to categorize the causes of problems:

Category

Examples of signals

Technical

Timeout, PSP failure, redirection error, problem on bank side

UX

Form too long, unreadable button, no autocomplete

Communication

Unclear message, no information about funds, no instructions

Offer

No payment method, additional costs, problem with discount code

Trust

No reviews, no operator logos, security concerns

Customer service

Long response time, lack of contact, inconsistent information from employees

In segment analysis, it is worth comparing new and returning customers, large and small shopping carts, customers from paid campaigns and customers from newsletters. Direct contact with an important customer after a payment problem can help you locate technical errors faster, especially when it involves a high-value shopping cart or B2B account.

Look for patterns, not isolated anecdotes. Examples of patterns:

  • high number of failed card payments on iOS Safari,
  • frequent comments about an incomprehensible 3DS error,
  • increase in notifications after changing payment provider,
  • problems with only one delivery method,
  • higher number of abandonments after a campaign with a specific offer.

In practice, it is useful to tag comments by topic, emotion and barrier type. A CX platform such as YourCX can help combine surveys, comments, checkout data and operational alerts to identify causes of problems faster. For example, if the number of payment complaints increases in a short period of time, the team can receive an alert and respond before the problem severely impacts conversions.

How to recover the customer and complete the sale?

Recovery from a payment error should be quick, calm and useful. The goal is not just to "push" the customer to pay, but to rebuild trust and show that the store understands the customer's needs.

1. Show a clear message after an error

A good message should answer three questions:

  • what happened,
  • whether the funds are safe,
  • what the customer can do now.

Example:

Payment failed. The money was not collected. If the bank has temporarily blocked the funds, it will release them automatically according to its rules. You can try again, choose another payment method or contact us.

Understanding the reason for payment rejection and providing clear information about the problem can help resolve the situation. The customer will appreciate a message that does not blame the customer and does not hide uncertainty.

2. Offer an alternative payment method

If the card has been declined, don't make the customer go back to the beginning. Show alternatives in the same step:

  • BLIK,
  • quick transfer,
  • digital wallets,
  • pay-by-link,
  • deferred payments,
  • "Buy now, pay later."

Offering a "Buy now, pay later" option can increase e-commerce conversions, especially when a customer is unsure at a higher cart value or wants to maintain financial flexibility.

3. Save the shopping cart and process data

A failed payment should not mean a loss of data. A saved shopping cart, delivery address, selected delivery method and invoice data reduces customer effort.

Ideally, the customer should be able to return to the last step from a unique recovery link. This increases the chances of finalization because it doesn't force them to re-enter the same information.

4. Send a quick recovery message

The email or SMS message should appear within a short period of time, such as 5-30 minutes after a failed attempt. It should include:

  • a clear explanation of the situation,
  • a link to complete the payment,
  • information about the saved shopping cart,
  • alternative payment methods,
  • contact to the consultant,
  • a brief question about the barrier.

Dynamic remarketing and retargeting are effective strategies for recovering abandoned shopping carts, which involve reaching users again with personalized messages. However, it is worth being careful that marketing does not overtake service. If a customer is worried about money, they need an explanation first, then a product reminder.

5. Make it easy to connect with people

For more expensive orders, B2B customers or recurring problems, consultant support can make a huge difference. A quick chat, phone call or social media contact allows you to solve the problem before the customer chooses a competitor.

A direct conversation also helps to understand the vendor's position and the customer's position. If there was a failure on the store's side, it's worth making that clear. If the problem is on the bank's side, you also need to explain to the customer what he can do.

6. Compensation only where it makes sense

Offering compensation in exchange for feedback can increase customers' willingness to share comments. However, this does not mean that every payment error should end in a rebate.

Compensation makes sense when:

  • the failure was on the part of the store or operator,
  • the problem was repeated several times,
  • the customer lost a lot of time,
  • a high LTV customer is involved,
  • the store wants to recover a lost customer after a real bad experience.

It doesn't make sense to give out discounts automatically in every situation, because it can lead to abuse. Sometimes all that is needed is quick help, an apology, clear information and a smooth completion of the order.

7. Explain the chargeback if the customer is concerned about the funds

The topic of chargeback may come up in conversations about payments. The chargeback procedure covers transactions made with payment cards, such as Visa and MasterCard, and allows you to complain about payments in the event of fraud or a mistaken transaction.

A chargeback complaint must be filed with the bank that issued the card, and the maximum time for filing a complaint is usually 120 days from the date of the transaction. In order to successfully file a chargeback complaint, you must provide evidence, such as confirmation of the transaction, correspondence with the merchant, and other documents proving the validity of the complaint.

If the seller does not respond to the chargeback complaint, the complaint is automatically accepted and the customer receives a refund. Chargeback is a free service to recover money in case of fraud, and banks are obliged to accept and process the complaint.

For the store, however, the most important thing is not to escalate if the matter can be resolved more quickly. If the error lies with the store, it's better to acknowledge the complaint, refund the money or help repeat the purchase, rather than let the chargeback act as a last avenue for recovery.

How to use feedback to improve checkout?

Feedback after a failed payment is most valuable when it leads to product, operational and communication decisions. Collecting feedback without changing the process only increases customer and employee frustration.

Optimizing checkout is about simplifying forms, enabling payment by different methods, and providing clear information on costs and delivery options. This is not a one-time project, but an ongoing process.

The most common actions resulting from feedback:

1. Improving error messages

Instead of technical code, the customer should see plain language:

  • what happened,
  • whether the order is saved,
  • whether the payment has been collected,
  • what he can do next,
  • where he can find help.

A good message can reduce the number of contacts to support and improve the feeling of security.

2. Simplifying forms

Optimizing the purchase path, including simplifying forms and reducing the amount of data required, can significantly reduce the risk of shopping cart abandonment.

In practice, this means:

  • removing unnecessary fields,
  • clearly marking mandatory fields,
  • autocomplete,
  • real-time validation,
  • purchase without creating an account,
  • no deletion of data after an error.

3. Adding missing payment methods

If customer feedback repetitively indicates the absence of BLIK, digital wallet, quick transfer, deferred payment or a local operator, it's not a detail. It's a conversion barrier.

Payment methods should match the market, segment and customer behavior. Different customer needs will arise in Poland, others in Germany, and others in B2B sales.

4. Optimize mobile checkout

On mobile devices, every extra step hurts more. It is worth checking:

  • the size of buttons,
  • readability of forms,
  • loading speed,
  • automatic scrolling to an error,
  • numeric keyboards at numeric fields,
  • 3DS/SCA operation after returning from the banking application.

Testing should take place on real devices, not just emulators.

5. Failure monitoring and alerts

If the number of interrupted payments, error comments or support contacts increases in a short period of time, the operations team should get an alert. Then you can react before the problem affects a larger group of customers.

This is where closed-loop feedback comes in handy. CX platforms, such as YourCX, can support the entire process: from collecting checkout surveys, to analyzing comments, to integrating with development, service and customer support teams.

6. A/B testing

Feedback indicates where to look for a problem. A/B testing helps to see which solutions really work.

Testing can include:

  • variants of error messages,
  • order of payment methods,
  • visibility of delivery costs,
  • layout of buttons,
  • number of checkout steps,
  • the content of the recovery message,
  • the moment of sending a reminder.

It is important not to test everything at once. Each hypothesis should have a clear metric of success.

How to measure the effects of changes?

If you want to improve checkout, you need to measure both numbers and comments. The metrics alone will show the trend, but only the feedback will explain why something has changed.

The most important metrics are:

Conversion metrics

  • conversion rate for the entire sales process,
  • cart abandonment rate,
  • checkout abandonment rate,
  • payment success rate, which is the percentage of successful payments on the PSP side,
  • number of payments started and completed,
  • share of customers returning after an error.

Satisfaction and effort indicators

  • CES after checkout,
  • CSAT from the last step of the process,
  • NPS for customers who experienced a payment problem,
  • assessments of message clarity,
  • assessments of the sense of security.

The CES is particularly important because it shows how much effort it took to complete the payment. If a customer had to enter data several times, change the method and contact support, even a successful sale can mean a poor e-commerce customer experience.

Operational measures

  • number of contacts to support related to the topics "payment", "payment error", "problem with shopping cart",
  • first response time,
  • time to resolve the issue,
  • share of requests requiring escalation,
  • number of payment-related complaints,
  • number of cases in which money had to be refunded.

Recovery indicators

  • percentage of recovered abandoned shopping carts after a failed payment,
  • share of customers who returned and finalized the transaction within 24-72 hours,
  • value of recovered orders,
  • effectiveness of recovery emails,
  • effectiveness of SMS messages,
  • the impact of retargeting on shopping cart recovery.

Data is worth reviewing weekly and monthly. Compare "before" and "after" periods of implementing changes, but be sure not to draw conclusions solely from correlations. Seasonality, campaigns, assortment changes, operator contracts and marketing activities can affect the result.

Collecting feedback should be an ongoing part of your sales efforts, not a one-time action, allowing you to continuously monitor and optimize your sales process.

Summary: feedback after a failed payment as a source of CX insights

A failed payment is not just a technical problem. It is the moment when the customer is close to a purchase decision, but at the same time can lose trust in the store very quickly. This is why feedback after a failed payment is so valuable for CX, sales and product management.

Systemic feedback collection allows you to see barriers that logs alone won't show: an incomprehensible message, concern about funds, lack of a payment method, mobile issues, hidden costs, too long a form or lack of quick support. Feedback from customers who have abandoned an offer is just as important as feedback from those who have made a purchase, as it can reveal key reasons for abandonment.

Companies that implement Voice of Customer and closed-loop feedback move more quickly from symptom to cause. This gives them a better basis for decisions: what to simplify, what message to improve, which payment methods to add, when to trigger an alert and how to win back the customer without increasing sales pressure.

In practice, those teams that treat the customer's needs, his opinion and real effort as operational data win. This approach not only improves checkout, but supports relationship building, reduces abandonment and helps create a more resilient sales process.

FAQ: the most common questions about feedback after a failed payment

Why collect feedback after a failed payment?

Feedback after a payment error reveals real barriers to checkout that are not visible in the transaction data itself. The error status will show that the payment failed, but it won't explain whether the customer didn't trust the message, didn't find the preferred method, had a problem with the bank or dropped out due to additional costs.

Such information helps reduce the number of abandoned shopping carts, improve the customer experience and make faster decisions on checkout changes.

What questions to ask a customer after a payment error?

It's best to start with short questions:

  • What prevented you from completing the payment?
  • Was the error message understandable to you?
  • Did you find your preferred payment method?
  • Do you need help completing the purchase?

Keep your questions concise, neutral and safe. Do not ask for card details, PINs, SMS codes, passwords or bank login details.

How do you get back a customer who has not completed the payment?

First, show a clear message on the page after the error. Then save the shopping cart, suggest an alternative payment method and send an email or SMS with a link to renew the payment. If the customer is worried about the status of the funds, enable a quick contact with a consultant.

A goodwill gesture can be considered in selected cases, but transparency, security and minimal effort on the customer's part are key.

How does customer feedback help improve checkout?

Customer comments indicate specific items for improvement: message content, form length, number of steps, lack of payment methods, problems on mobile devices, or showing delivery costs too late.

With feedback, you can prioritize solutions according to the real scale of the problem, rather than solely according to the team's hypotheses. This makes it easier to plan A/B tests and effectively optimize checkout.

What metrics are worth monitoring after implementing checkout changes?

It's worth monitoring conversion rate, checkout abandonment rate, cart abandonment rate, payment success rate, number of support contacts related to payments, CES/CSAT for the payment process, and share of recovered shopping carts.

The best results come from combining numerical trends with customer comments. This makes it easier to distinguish a real improvement in the experience from a random change in the data.

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