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Seeing a GoDaddy charge on your statement?

Common ways GoDaddy charges might appear on your statement

  • DNHGODADDY.COM AUD
  • DNHGODADDY.COM MEXICO
  • DNHGODADDY.COM PHP
  • DNHGODADDY.COM ISRAEL
  • DNHGODADDY.COM
  • DNHGODADDY.COM 480-505-8855 AZ
  • GODADDY.COM
  • PAYPAL GODADDY.COM
  • GDP [Merchant Name]

What is GoDaddy?

GoDaddy Inc. is a global web services provider offering domain registration, website hosting, email, SSL certificates, and digital marketing tools.
The company supports over 20 million customers worldwide, providing infrastructure for individuals and businesses to manage their online presence. GoDaddy’s billing system processes payments for domains, renewals, and hosting subscriptions. Learn more at GoDaddy.com.

Common causes for GoDaddy charges

  • Domain registration or renewal (annual or multi-year).
  • Web hosting, VPS, or managed WordPress service fees.
  • SSL certificate purchase or renewal.
  • Email or business email plan subscriptions.
  • Website builder, backup, or site security add-ons.
  • Automatic renewals turned on (often catches people off guard).
  • Refunds or reversals (if service canceled or refunded) — show as negative or credit entries.

Decoding GoDaddy charge tags

  • DNH* is used in GoDaddy’s merchant descriptor system (often seen on card charges).
  • GODADDY.COM identifies the vendor as GoDaddy, Inc.
  • AUD / MEXICO / PHP / ISRAEL indicates currency and region of that billing transaction (Australia Dollars, Mexico, Philippine Pesos, Israel).
  • 480-505-8855 AZ is the phone number + “AZ” (Arizona) for GoDaddy’s contact region (their headquarters in Arizona). Many descriptors include that phone number.
  • GDP* is shown on American Express; the prefix “GDP” (GoDaddy Payments) may appear in place of the merchant name while pending.
  • PAYPAL ** may show if you used PayPal for GoDaddy payments.

What to do if you don’t recognize this charge

Spot, verify, and resolve suspicious charges in minutes.

  • Contact your bank.

    Call your bank using the number on the back of your card.

  • Contact AT&T.

    Call their customer service to verify the charge and get transaction details.

  • Dispute the charge & monitor account.

    If it appears fraudulent, report it to your bank or card issuer.

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