What is "MAKE.COM" on my bank statement?
MAKE.COM is a legitimate subscription charge from Make, the workflow automation platform formerly known as Integromat.
Merchant: Make | Category: Subscription
What Is This Charge?
A charge from Make reflects a subscription purchase at Make, the workflow automation platform formerly known as Integromat. Make was founded in 2012, and it operates as a software service rather than a physical store, so it does not have retail store counts. The company helps users connect apps and automate tasks like sending data between Gmail, Slack, Google Sheets, Shopify, and hundreds of other tools. A MAKE.COM statement line usually means a paid plan, a renewal, or a usage-based billing event tied to an active account.
Why Does This Charge Appear on My Statement?
This charge appears when someone starts a paid Make plan, upgrades from a free plan, or renews a monthly or annual subscription. It can also appear after a team member connects a billing card to an automation workspace and authorizes recurring charges. In some cases, the charge follows a trial conversion, a plan change, or extra usage that pushes the account beyond the included quota. If you use Make for business automations, the statement line usually matches a legitimate software billing event.
Typical Charge Amounts
Typical Make charges often start around $9 per month for entry-level plans and can rise to about $16, $29, $59, or $99 per month depending on usage and plan tier. Annual billing can post as a larger one-time charge, such as $99, $168, $348, or more, depending on the subscription level. Some accounts also show a temporary authorization hold of $1, $0, or a small verification charge before the final recurring payment posts. Usage-based overages can make the billed amount higher than the advertised base plan when scenario runs or operations exceed the included limit.
Common Variations
Common descriptor variations include MAKE.COM, MAKE.COM*, MAKE.COM INC, MAKE.COM/INTEGROMAT, and MAKE.COM EU. Some card statements also show Make, Integromat, or a shortened billing label with a country or region code. Store-number patterns are not typical for this merchant because Make is a digital subscription service, not a retail chain. If a statement line includes a web-style descriptor, it usually points to the online billing system rather than a physical location.
Is This Charge Legitimate?
This charge is usually legitimate if you or someone on your team created a Make account, started a trial, or entered a card at make.com. First, log in at https://www.make.com and open the billing or subscription section to match the posted amount and date. Second, check the email inbox tied to the account for invoices, renewal notices, or trial-end reminders from Make. Third, review whether the charge matches a plan upgrade, annual renewal, or extra usage event before assuming fraud.
How to Dispute or Cancel
1. Sign in to your Make account at https://www.make.com and open the billing page to cancel the subscription or downgrade the plan. 2. Save the invoice, the charge date, and the exact descriptor before contacting support, because those details help locate the transaction. 3. Contact Make support through the help center at https://www.make.com/en/help if you need billing help or a refund review. 4. If you do not recognize the charge, call the number on the back of your card and open a bank dispute at the same time, because banks can block future recurring payments while the merchant review is pending.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my MAKE.COM charge show as MAKE.COM*?
The asterisk usually marks an online card-not-present purchase, and it often appears when Make bills a subscription or renews a plan. The descriptor can change by processor, region, or invoice type, but it still points to the same workflow automation service at make.com.
How do I cancel my Make subscription?
Log in to your Make account at https://www.make.com, open Billing or Subscription, and choose cancel or downgrade before the next renewal date. Save the confirmation email, because recurring software charges can continue until the billing cycle ends.
Why is my MAKE.COM charge a different amount than expected?
The amount can differ because Make bills monthly or annually, and some plans add charges when usage exceeds the included operations. A card may also show a temporary $1 or $0 verification hold before the final subscription amount posts.
Is MAKE.COM the same as Integromat?
Yes, Make is the company that rebranded from Integromat, so statement lines may still reference MAKE.COM/INTEGROMAT or similar wording. That descriptor usually means the same automation platform and not a separate merchant.
Can MAKE.COM charges be for a team account?
Yes, a team member can create or upgrade a shared workspace and attach a company card, which makes the charge appear on the statement even if you did not personally sign up. Check the account owner, workspace billing settings, and invoice email before filing a dispute.
Similar Charges
- MAKE.COM
- MAKE.COM*
- MAKE.COM INC
- MAKE.COM/INTEGROMAT
- MAKE.COM EU