Mon, 22 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 15, 2025 · 14:51
Australia News Updated Jul 15, 2025

Australian central bank proposes banning card payment surcharges

The Reserve Bank of Australia has proposed banning card payment surcharges to save consumers over $1 billion annually. Governor Michele Bullock stated the move aims to reduce inefficiencies in the payment system. The plan also includes lowering interchange fees and increasing fee transparency for Visa and Mastercard. A final decision will follow a six-week consultation period.

Sydney, July 15

Australia's central bank has proposed banning surcharges on card payments in a move it says will save consumers over a billion Australian dollars every year.

In a consultation paper released on Tuesday, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) said that a review of merchant card payment costs and surcharges found it would be in the public interest to remove surcharging on payments made using eftpos (the domestic debit card network), Mastercard and Visa cards.

It said that Australians currently pay 1.2 billion Australian dollars (768 million US dollars) in card payment surcharges every year and that surcharging is no longer achieving its "intended purpose" of steering customers towards more efficient payment choices as cash usage has declined.

"We think the time has come to address some of these high costs and inefficiencies in the system," RBA Governor Michele Bullock said at a press conference.

Under current rules, businesses are prohibited from imposing a surcharge greater than what it costs to accept a specific payment type. According to the RBA, eftpos and debit cards are typically less expensive for merchants to accept than credit cards, reported Xinhua news agency.

However, its review found that businesses are increasingly charging the same surcharge rate across all cards.

"Removing surcharging would make card payments simpler, more transparent and help to increase competition in the card payments system," it said.

Australia's Treasurer Jim Chalmers announced last October that the federal government would ban surcharges for debit card payments. The RBA review concluded it would be simpler to remove surcharges on debit and credit cards to avoid confusion and implementation issues.

The central bank also proposed lowering the cap on interchange fees paid by businesses, which it said would benefit 90 per cent of businesses and save another 1.2 billion Australian dollars a year.

Additionally, its proposal would force credit card networks such as Visa and Mastercard to publish the fees they charge to improve transparency and competition.

The review will be finalised following a six-week consultation period.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Interesting approach. But won't businesses just increase product prices to compensate? We saw this happen with GST implementation in India. The consumer always ends up paying somehow.

Aditya G

UPI has made digital payments so seamless in India without any extra charges. Other countries should learn from our success story! 🇮🇳

Sarah B

As someone who lived in both countries, I appreciate Australia taking this step. In India, small businesses still charge 2% extra for card payments which discourages digital transactions.

Karthik V

The transparency part is most important. In India, many merchants don't even tell you about card charges until you're about to pay. This needs to change!

Nisha Z

While I support this move, I hope they consider small businesses too. In India, many small shops avoid card payments because of high MDR charges. The solution needs to be balanced.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked