Statement descriptors
Learn how statement descriptors work.
Statement descriptors explain charges or payments on bank statements. Using clear and accurate statement descriptors can reduce chargebacks and disputes. Banks and card networks require the inclusion of certain types of information that help customers understand their statements, and statement descriptors provide this information.
When you activate your account, you can set a single statement descriptor (static statement descriptor) that appears on all customer statements. For card charges, you can also create a statement descriptor that contains a static prefix associated with your account but with a dynamic suffix associated with each charge. This enables you to specify details about the product, service, or payment on bank or card statements.
Most banks display this information consistently, but some might display it incorrectly or not at all.
Statement descriptor requirements
A complete statement descriptor—either a single static descriptor or the combination of a prefix and suffix—must meet the following requirements:
- Contains only Latin characters.
- Contains between 5 and 22 characters, inclusive.
- Contains at least one letter (if using a prefix and a suffix, both require at least one letter).
- Doesn’t contain any of the following special characters:
<
,>
,\
,'
"
*
. - Reflects your Doing Business As (DBA) name.
- Contains more than a single common term or common website URL. A website URL only is acceptable if it provides a clear and accurate description of a transaction on a customer’s statement.
A static prefix, also called a shortened descriptor in the Dashboard, must contain between 2 and 10 characters, inclusive. The remaining characters are reserved for the dynamic suffix.
Set the static statement descriptor
You set a static statement descriptor or the shortened descriptor (prefix) in the Dashboard. This value appears on all customer statements for charges or payments.
A static statement descriptor is sufficient if:
- Your business provides only a single product or service.
- Your customers understand a static value for any transaction with your business.
- You prefer to provide the same statement descriptor for all transactions.
For card charges, consider a static prefix with dynamic suffix if:
- You provide multiple products or services.
- Your customers might not understand a single value for all their transactions with your business.
- You prefer to provide transaction-specific details on the statement descriptor.
You can set both the statement descriptor for non-card charges and the shortened statement descriptor for card charges.
If you set the statement descriptor and don’t set a prefix (shortened descriptor), then for card payments Stripe uses the statement descriptor as the prefix. If the account statement descriptor is longer than 10 characters, we truncate it as needed to fit the character limit.
Set a dynamic suffix
Dynamic suffixes are supported only for card payments. Use the suffix to specify details about the transaction so your customer can understand it clearly on their statement. The suffix is concatenated with the prefix, the *
symbol, and a space to form the complete statement descriptor that your customer sees.
Make sure that the total length of the concatenated descriptor is no more than 22 characters, including the *
symbol and the space. If the prefix is RUNCLUB
(7 characters), the dynamic suffix can contain up to 13 characters—for example, 9-22-19 10K
(11 characters) or OCT MARATHON
(12 characters). The computed statement descriptor is RUNCLUB* 9-22-19 10K
or RUNCLUB* OCT MARATHON
.
For card charges, providing a dynamic statement descriptor requires the statement_
value. For non-card charges, if you set a value only for statement_
on a PaymentIntent, Stripe uses it in place of the account statement descriptor (static descriptor).
The following examples show how to add a suffix to the PaymentIntent object.
Set the statement descriptor on non-card charges
Use the statement_
parameter to set the complete statement descriptor for non-card charges. When creating a PaymentIntent, attempting to set this parameter for card charges results in a 400 error. For payments made with a card, use statement_
instead.
Set Japanese statement descriptors
Japanese businesses can set kanji and kana statement descriptors. Providing clear and easy to understand statement descriptors is important to reduce confusion and chargebacks. We recommend setting statement descriptors in all three supported scripts (kanji, kana, and Latin characters).
You can change your account’s static kanji and kana statement descriptors and shortened descriptors (prefix) in the Dashboard.
For card charges, you can set dynamic suffixes in kanji and kana on PaymentIntents and Checkout Sessions. We compute the full descriptor that cardholders see by concatenating the shortened prefix and separators, in the same way as statement_
.
The following example shows how to set kanji and kana suffixes on a PaymentIntent.
Requirements
While Japanese statement descriptors share some requirements with English requirements, the following table shows additional requirements for kanji and kana descriptors.
Kanji | Kana | |
---|---|---|
Maximum total length | 17 | 22 |
Minimum prefix length | 1 | 2 |
Maximum prefix length | 10 | 10 |
Supported character type | Kanji, kana, and Latin | Kana |
Validation rule | < > \ ' " * * are not allowed | Only kana, spaces, dashes, and dots are allowed |
Note
Total length is the length of either the static descriptor or the concatenated descriptor (prefix + separator + suffix). Descriptors exceeding the maximum length are truncated.
Issuer behavior
Japanese statement descriptors are available only when both of the following are true:
- The card is a Visa or Mastercard issued in Japan.
- The charge is processed by a Japanese business or on behalf of a Japanese business.
For applicable charges, most issuers use a Japanese statement descriptor rather than a Latin one. However, it’s ultimately up to the issuer to decide whether to show kanji, kana, or Latin characters on the cardholder’s statement.
The calculated_statement_descriptor in API responses is always the Latin statement descriptor, but that doesn’t prevent the issuer from using a Japanese statement descriptor.
Statement descriptor display timing
Kanji and kana statement descriptors are sent to issuers at time of payment capture. As a result, they usually take a few days to appear on cardholder statements. In the meantime a temporary descriptor might be visible to cardholders:
- Visa, Mastercard: The English-language statement descriptor.
- JCB, Diners Club, and Discover: The account’s default statement descriptor.