How to Find a Store Without AVS in 2026: Complete Practical Guide

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A Detailed Analysis of the Address Verification System (AVS), Why Stores Without This Check Have Virtually Disappeared, and Strategies for Working with Stores That Use "Soft" AVS Verification.​

Bro, the question of how to find stores without AVS is a classic that almost every beginner asks. But in 2026, stores with AVS completely disabled are practically non-existent. This isn't because merchants are being difficult, but because AVS is a basic security measure required by payment systems and is critical for protecting their business. Let's break down how AVS actually works and what you can do to bypass this check.

🎯 What Is AVS (Address Verification Service) and How Does It Work?​

AVS (Address Verification Service) is a fraud prevention tool that compares the billing address provided by the customer with the address on file at the card-issuing bank.

How the Verification Process Works:​

StepWhat Happens
1. Address EntryCustomer enters their billing address on the payment page
2. Data TransferInformation is sent through the payment gateway to the acquirer and then to the issuer
3. ComparisonThe bank compares the entered address with the one in its system
4. Response CodeThe bank returns an AVS code indicating the degree of match
5. DecisionBased on the code, the merchant (or payment gateway) decides to approve or decline

AVS Response Codes and Their Meaning​

Here's a breakdown of the main AVS codes returned by payment systems:
CodeDescriptionWhat It Means for You
X/YFull match — address and ZIP code matchIdeal scenario — transaction will pass
AAddress matches, ZIP doesn'tSoft decline — may pass depending on merchant settings
W/ZZIP matches, address doesn'tSoft decline — often passes on larger merchants
NNeither address nor ZIP matchHard decline — transaction will likely be rejected
UBank doesn't support AVSRare in 2026 — most banks support AVS
GInternational cardAVS may not be supported

🚫 Why "Stores Without AVS" Hardly Exist​

AVS is not an option that merchants can just disable. Here are the main reasons:

1. Payment System Requirements
Visa and Mastercard require AVS usage for online transactions. It's part of their security standards. Refusing AVS makes a merchant less attractive to payment systems.

2. Fraud and Chargeback Liability
If a merchant accepts a payment without AVS verification, they take on all fraud and chargeback risk. In 2026, Visa tightened its monitoring program (VAMP), and fraud penalties increased significantly — the threshold was lowered from 2.2% to 1.5% in April 2026.

3. Card Testing Protection
Without AVS, merchants become easy targets for automated card testing attacks.

🛠️ What Are "Soft" and "Hard" AVS Checks?​

Instead of looking for a store without AVS, you need to look for stores with a "soft" AVS check. This is the key distinction:
Check TypeWhat Happens
Hard DeclineIf AVS doesn't match — transaction is immediately declined with an error code
Soft DeclineTransaction is flagged as suspicious, sent for manual review, or left to the merchant's discretion

Important: Soft check is not a "decline" — it's a "Hold" on the payment. The merchant can manually approve it.

How AVS Is Configured on the Merchant Side​

Payment gateways allow merchants to set the strictness level of AVS. Here are three options:
SettingDescription
Ignore AVSCompletely ignore AVS result — extremely rare
Relaxed AVSMake some fields optional (e.g., address line 2)
Strict AVSRequire full match — hard check
Relaxed AVS mode is exactly what you're looking for. Some payment gateways allow merchants to make ZIP codes or parts of the address optional, reducing false declines.

🎯 Strategy for Finding Stores with "Soft" AVS​

Step 1: Testing the Store​

Before making a large order, run a test transaction with a deliberately mismatched ZIP code:
ResultWhat It Means
Instant declineHard AVS check — this store is not suitable
Pending/manual reviewSoft AVS — there's a chance of passing
Transaction passedAVS is disabled or very soft (rare)

Step 2: Choosing the Right Merchants​

Stores that are more likely to use Relaxed AVS:
  • Medium-sized Shopify stores (not too small, not too large)
  • High-volume stores where manual review of every order is impossible
  • WooCommerce stores with flexible payment gateway settings
  • Stores selling digital goods — they often have softer checks

Step 3: Working with the Right Cards​

The most reliable way to avoid AVS declines is to use cards with a ZIP code matching the billing address:
  • Look up the ZIP code for the card through WhitePages or similar services
  • Use Non-VBV cards — they have a lower chance of triggering additional checks
  • Use cards from major banks (Chase, BofA, Citi) — they trigger fewer suspicions

📋 AVS Work Checklist​

markdown:
Code:
[ ] Choose a medium-sized store (not the smallest, not a top giant)
[ ] Make a test transaction of $5-10 with a mismatched ZIP
[ ] Observe the reaction: hard decline or soft check?
[ ] If soft — continue working with this store
[ ] Use cards where ZIP matches the billing address
[ ] If declined — don't try to force it (that's hard AVS)
[ ] Log the result — which stores work, which don't

💎 Final Conclusion​

Bro, in 2026, there is no simple list of "stores without AVS." Instead, you need to:
  1. Understand that AVS is a standard, and stores without it are a rarity
  2. Look for stores with "soft" AVS (Relaxed AVS), which don't block on mismatch but send for review
  3. Test merchants before large orders — one $5-10 order gives more information than any list
  4. Use cards with the correct ZIP code to minimize the chance of decline
  5. Work with Non-VBV cards — they have fewer additional checks

The Golden Rule: don't try to force a store with hard AVS. It's pointless — the system will block you and won't let it through. Better to spend time finding a store with a soft check.

Good luck, brother. If you need anything — write.
 
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