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Priority review Rule Amended Final

Merchant Card Payment Surcharging Reform Conclusions

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Published March 31st, 2026
Detected March 31st, 2026
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Summary

The Reserve Bank of Australia Payments System Board has published its Conclusions Paper on the Review of Merchant Card Payment Costs and Surcharging, finalizing decisions to remove merchant surcharging on debit, prepaid, and credit cards across eftpos, Mastercard, and Visa networks, lower interchange fee caps, and increase transparency requirements for card networks. Most changes take effect 1 October 2026, with remaining changes effective 1 April 2027.

What changed

The Payments System Board has concluded that removing the surcharging framework, which has been in place for over two decades, is in the public interest. The key decisions include: (1) removing surcharging on all designated card networks effective 1 October 2026; (2) lowering caps on interchange fees paid by Australian businesses, with small businesses expected to benefit most; and (3) increasing transparency over fees charged by card networks and payment service providers to strengthen competition. Some changes, including interchange caps on foreign cards and certain transparency measures, will take effect 1 April 2027.

Merchants and payment service providers should begin preparations to stop applying surcharges by 1 October 2026 for domestic transactions. Businesses accepting international cards and implementing transparency changes have until 1 April 2027. Merchants should review their card acceptance agreements and expect reduced interchange costs. A further public consultation is planned for mid-2026 on regulating mobile wallets, three-party card networks, buy-now-pay-later services, and e-commerce platforms.

What to do next

  1. Stop applying surcharges on domestic card transactions by 1 October 2026
  2. Review and update point-of-sale systems and pricing displays to reflect inclusive pricing
  3. Monitor mid-2026 consultation on additional retail payment system regulation

Source document (simplified)

Media Release Review of Merchant Card Payment Costs and Surcharging – Conclusions Paper

Number 2026-10 Date

31 March 2026

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has today published a Conclusions Paper which sets
out the final decisions of the Payments System Board (PSB) on the Review of Merchant
Card Payment Costs and Surcharging. The PSB has concluded that a package of reforms that
includes removing surcharging, reducing interchange fees and increasing transparency
would be in the public interest and promote competition and efficiency in the payments
system. This follows an extensive public consultation process since the release of a Consultation Paper in July 2025, which sought stakeholder feedback on the PSB’s
preliminary policy proposals.

The key decisions of the PSB include:

  • removing surcharging on debit, prepaid and credit cards on the designated eftpos, Mastercard and Visa card networks. The surcharging framework, introduced more than two decades ago, is no longer achieving its intended purpose of steering consumers towards making more efficient payment choices. The increased prevalence of businesses surcharging all cards at the same rate, challenges with enforcing the current surcharging framework, and consumers using less cash have reduced the effectiveness of the surcharging regime. Removing surcharging would make card payments simpler, more transparent and increase competition among payment service providers. Removing surcharging also aligns with the preference of most consumers for payment costs to be incorporated into advertised prices.
  • lowering the caps on interchange fees paid by Australian businesses. These changes are expected to lower businesses’ costs when they accept domestic or overseas card payments. Small businesses should benefit the most because they tend to pay fees closer to the existing caps.
  • increasing transparency over the fees charged by card networks and payment service providers to strengthen competition. Improving transparency will enhance competition between players within the payments chain, put downward pressure on card payment costs and make it easier for businesses to shop around for a better deal. Most of these changes will come into effect on 1 October 2026, including the removal of surcharging and reductions in the interchange caps for domestic card transactions. The introduction of an interchange cap on foreign cards and some changes to payment cost transparency will come into effect later, on 1 April 2027, to ensure the payments industry has sufficient time to implement these more complex changes.

The RBA plans to start a public consultation in mid-2026 to assess the public interest
case for regulating areas of the retail payments system that were not covered under this
Review, including mobile wallets, three-party card networks, ‘buy-now, pay-later’
services and e-commerce platforms.

Enquiries

Communications Department
Reserve Bank of Australia
SYDNEY

Phone: +61 2 9551 8111
Email: rbainfo@rba.gov.au

Named provisions

Removal of Surcharging Lowering Interchange Fee Caps Increasing Transparency Implementation Timeline

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
RBA
Published
March 31st, 2026
Compliance deadline
October 1st, 2026 (184 days)
Instrument
Rule
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
Media Release 2026-10

Who this affects

Applies to
Banks Retailers Consumers
Industry sector
5221 Commercial Banking 4541 E-Commerce 4411 Retail Trade
Activity scope
Card Payment Processing Interchange Fee Structures Merchant Surcharging
Geographic scope
Australia AU

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
Dodd-Frank PCI DSS
Topics
Consumer Protection Banking

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