ASB Ordered to Pay $2.1m for Fair Dealing Breaches
Summary
The High Court has ordered ASB Bank to pay $2.1 million for fair dealing breaches related to insurance products and banking services. These breaches affected over 25,000 customers, who were refunded approximately $4.7 million by the bank.
What changed
The High Court has imposed a final penalty of $2.1 million on ASB Bank Limited for fair-dealing breaches concerning its insurance products and banking services. ASB admitted to making false and/or misleading representations, including failing to correctly apply multi-policy discounts and fee exemptions, which resulted in financial harm to over 25,000 customers. The bank has already refunded approximately $4.7 million to affected customers.
This enforcement action highlights the critical need for financial institutions to maintain robust systems and processes to ensure accurate application of discounts and fee exemptions. The penalty signals that systemic failures without adequate quality assurance and proactive problem detection are unacceptable. Regulated entities should review their internal controls and remediation processes to prevent similar breaches and potential penalties.
What to do next
- Review internal controls for accuracy in applying discounts and fee exemptions.
- Assess existing systems for proactive detection and escalation of customer-impacting issues.
- Ensure remediation processes are timely and effective for identified breaches.
Penalties
$2.1 million penalty
Source document (simplified)
Back 05 March 2026
ASB ordered to pay $2.1m after fair dealing breaches affecting over 25,000 customers
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MR No. 2026 – 07
The High Court has imposed a final penalty of $2.1 million on ASB Bank Limited for fair‑dealing breaches relating to its insurance products and banking services.
ASB admitted making false and/or misleading representations that resulted in financial harm to customers failure to correctly apply multi‑policy discounts on ASB‑branded insurance products, and failure to apply fee exemptions for eligible FastNet Business customers.
This resulted in more than 25,000 customers being refunded approximately $4.7 million by ASB.
In her judgment, Justice O’Gorman said, “Where contraventions of the FMCA are the result of process or system failures, the penalty must be set at a level that creates a strong incentive for financial institutions to maintain adequate systems and processes. The penalty needs to be at a level that clearly signals manual processes without adequate quality assurance and proactive problem detection and escalation is unacceptable.”
FMA Head of Enforcement, Margot Gatland said, “This penalty reflects the seriousness of ASB’s systems failures. Customers are entitled to rely on their bank to apply discounts and fee exemptions accurately. ASB’s failed to detect and address these issues over many years.”
“We acknowledge ASB’s cooperation, however, the duration of the failings and the delays in identifying and escalating the issues meant that a strong regulatory response was necessary.”
The FMA acknowledges that ASB-self reported the issues and carried out remediation.
ENDS
Download the related judgment [302KB]
Background
FMA files proceedings against ASB for alleged fair dealing breaches
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