Australia RBA Card Payment Reforms Effective October 2026
Summary
The Reserve Bank of Australia published conclusions on merchant card payment costs and surcharging reforms effective October 1, 2026. Key changes include reduced interchange fee caps (8 cents for debit, 0.3% for credit, 1.0% for foreign cards) and allowing card schemes to impose no-surcharge rules. Card schemes and large acquirers must publish standardized fee information.
What changed
The RBA published final conclusions on card payment reforms covering three key areas. First, the prohibition on no-surcharge rules will be lifted on October 1, 2026, allowing card schemes to impose surcharging restrictions. Second, interchange fee caps are being reduced: debit and prepaid cards capped at 8 cents, consumer credit cards at 0.3%, foreign-issued cards at 1.0% (new), while commercial credit card caps remain at 0.8%. Third, card schemes and large acquirers must publish clearer, standardized fee information.
Card-issuing financial institutions must adjust their interchange revenue models to comply with the reduced fee caps. Merchants gain greater flexibility to surcharge card payments but face new transparency requirements. Payment networks must simplify scheme fee schedules and provide clearer billing practices. All affected parties must implement changes by October 1, 2026.
What to do next
- Monitor RBA implementation guidance for October 2026 effective date
- Review and update card fee structures to comply with new interchange caps
- Assess merchant surcharging policies in light of lifted prohibition
Archived snapshot
Apr 9, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
April 9, 2026
Australia: Card Payments Costs And Surcharging Reforms – What It Means For The Payments Industry
Simon Kiburg, Daniel Knight K&L Gates LLP + Follow Contact LinkedIn Facebook X Send Embed
[co-author: Joshua Dries]
On 31 March 2026, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) published its conclusions paper titled Merchant Card Payments Costs and Surcharging.
Key Takeaways
The RBA outlined a range of changes including three key reforms to card payment surcharging and costs, specifically:
- Allowing card schemes to prevent surcharging on debit and credit cards, citing the absence of meaningful alternatives for many consumers;
- Lowered the caps on interchange fees (including introducing caps for foreign cards for the first time) to reduce acceptance costs for merchants, particularly for small businesses; and
- Card schemes and large acquirers will be required to publish fees and provide standardised, clearer information to businesses to promote greater transparency. Surcharging
On 1 October 2026, the RBA will lift its prohibition on ‘no-surcharge rules’ for debit, prepaid and credit cards issued by Visa and Mastercard. The RBA expects that the card networks will impose no-surcharge rules shortly after this occurs.
Interchange Fees
Debit and prepaid card interchange fees will be capped at 8 cents, consumer credit card interchange will be capped at 0.3%, and foreign‑issued cards will face a new 1.0% cap. The existing interchange cap for commercial credit cards (0.8%) will be retained, partially owing to the potentially adverse effect on competition. The RBA accepted that small issuers face higher costs but determined that any specific exemptions would lead to heightened regulatory complexity and arbitrage risks whilst also increasing end‑user costs for merchants and consumers.
Increased Transparency
The Payment Services Board expects the card networks to take steps to simplify their scheme fee schedules and improve their fee billing practices as a result of these changes.
Next Steps
These changes will take effect from 1 October 2026.
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DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.
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