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ASIC Launches Interactive Dashboard for Financial Complaints Data

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Published May 15th, 2026
Detected March 17th, 2026
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Summary

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has launched a new interactive dashboard providing unprecedented access to consumer complaints data. The dashboard allows users to compare complaints reported by individual financial firms, enhancing transparency and accountability within the financial services industry.

What changed

ASIC has launched a new interactive dashboard that provides public access to consumer complaints data submitted by financial firms. This dashboard allows users to compare complaints received by individual firms, including breakdowns by product type, issue, and outcome, as well as complaint resolution times and monetary remedies paid. The initiative aims to enhance transparency and provide valuable insights into consumer concerns and potential harm across the financial services industry.

This new tool empowers consumers by increasing visibility into how financial firms handle disputes. It also provides ASIC with a valuable dataset to inform regulatory decision-making and identify emerging issues within the financial sector. The dashboard complements existing reporting on external dispute resolution and reportable situations, offering a more comprehensive view of the financial dispute resolution framework in Australia.

Source document (simplified)

Newsroom

Print Share Australians now have unprecedented access to consumer complaints data following the launch of ASIC’s new interactive dashboard.

The Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) data dashboard enables users to compare the complaints reported by individual financial firms for the first time, including their handling of complaints associated with specific products like home loans, credit cards, life and general insurance, or financial advice.

ASIC Commissioner Alan Kirkland said the data dashboard would enhance transparency by providing valuable insights into complaints volumes and trends, giving greater visibility of consumer concerns and potential harm across the financial services industry.

‘Transparency is crucial to supporting a fair, strong, and efficient financial system. The launch of our new internal dispute resolution data dashboard marks a significant step in improving public scrutiny of the system,’ he said.

Other key features of the dashboard include:

  • an overview of complaints volumes and trends over specified reporting periods
  • categorised breakdowns of complaints by issue and complaint outcome
  • complaints resolution times for individual financial firms, and
  • information about monetary remedies paid. Commissioner Kirkland added that in addition to empowering consumers, the public-facing dashboard promotes greater accountability within the financial services industry and provides ASIC with a valuable data set to inform regulatory decision making.

'Beyond providing for a comparison between individual firms, this dashboard provides a bird's-eye view of how the Australian financial sector handles complaints,' said Mr Kirkland.

'This makes it easier to identify key trends, including the reasons complaints are lodged, increases or decreases in complaints handling times, and the sorts of products that attract the most complaints. This in turn allows us to flag emerging issues for industry attention before they become serious problems.'

The dashboard also includes important information for users about how to navigate the new dashboard, how to interpret the data, definitions of key terms, and an explanation of the methodology.

This IDR data publication aligns with the Australian Financial Complaints Authority’s reporting of external dispute resolution (data to provide a complete picture of the financial dispute resolution framework.

In October, ASIC also launched its Reportable Situations dashboard, which contains granular information about financial services and credit licensees’ self-reported breaches.

Interactive dashboard

Internal Dispute Resolution data dashboard

Additional information

Background

The IDR regime requires certain financial firms to report all complaints received through their IDR processes. ASIC is empowered to publish firm level information about complaints received.

In previous years, ASIC published thematic reports on IDR but has since foreshadowed the intention to publish more granular data following consultation.

ASIC consulted on its proposed approach over April and May 2025, before publishing a summary of feedback in September 2025 outlining its final approach to the IDR data publication.

The publication approach was determined following consideration of 47 submissions received in response to CP 383 Reportable situations and internal dispute resolution data publication (CP 383).

Source

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Classification

Agency
ASIC
Published
May 15th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Financial advisers Insurers
Geographic scope
National (Australia)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Data Transparency

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