Australia’s central bank will ban merchants from adding surcharges to credit and debit card payments starting October 2026, a move that cuts into banks’ fee revenue but is expected to save consumers about A$1.2 billion annually.
The Reserve Bank of Australia also plans to lower interchange fee caps and introduce further transparency rules in 2027, aligning the country with Europe, Canada, the UK, and the US where similar restrictions already exist.
EconomistWithaD on
Time to see what happens to average CC interest rates, consumer prices, and access to debt.
Not quite sure that this will work as intended, and I think we will likely see more losers than winners, but I do see a route through which this is socially welfare improving.
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Summary:
Australia’s central bank will ban merchants from adding surcharges to credit and debit card payments starting October 2026, a move that cuts into banks’ fee revenue but is expected to save consumers about A$1.2 billion annually.
The Reserve Bank of Australia also plans to lower interchange fee caps and introduce further transparency rules in 2027, aligning the country with Europe, Canada, the UK, and the US where similar restrictions already exist.
Time to see what happens to average CC interest rates, consumer prices, and access to debt.
Not quite sure that this will work as intended, and I think we will likely see more losers than winners, but I do see a route through which this is socially welfare improving.