About OnePointFive
OnePointFive is a climate-focused advisory and training firm that provides organizations with sustainability consulting, climate finance and technology expertise, and structured learning programs. Positioned at the intersection of environmental services and professional education, the company operates as a marketplace and advisory hub connecting businesses with vetted sustainability experts and offering tools to help them navigate the climate-driven economy. Their work spans sustainability strategy, ESG implementation, and climate-related upskilling for teams across industries.([f6s.com](https://www.f6s.com/company/onepointfive?utm_source=openai))
A charge from OnePointFive on a card statement is most likely related to payment for one of their services or programs—such as enrollment in a sustainability training or accelerator, access to climate or ESG courses or tools, or consulting/advisory work that was billed to a corporate or individual card. In some cases this might appear as a one‑time project fee, a program tuition-style payment, or a recurring subscription for ongoing access to learning content or advisory support, depending on the commercial arrangement. If the charge is international, it may also include currency conversion or foreign transaction fees added by the card issuer.
To verify a OnePointFive charge, the cardholder should first check recent emails for invoices, enrollment confirmations, or receipts from domains associated with OnePointFive (for example, opf.degree) and compare the billed amount and date with the statement line. Logging into any OnePointFive portals or learning platforms used by you or your organization can also help confirm active programs or subscriptions. If the charge is still unclear, the next step is to contact OnePointFive using the contact or support information on their official website and provide the last 4 digits of the card and transaction date/amount (but never the full card number) so they can locate the payment. If you suspect fraud or cannot match the charge after contacting them, you should follow up with your bank or card issuer to dispute or block further transactions.