Australian Payments Intelligence Brief
Weekly Intelligence Brief on the Australian Payments Industry
Monday, 15 June 2026
This Week's Top 3
Payday Super NPP Readiness Deadline — T-16 Days to 1 July 2026 Mandate
From 1 July 2026, employers must pay superannuation contributions on each payday rather than quarterly, with the NPP enabling same-day real-time settlement to super funds. All superannuation funds must be capable of receiving NPP payments from that date, now just 16 days away.
Why it matters: This is the most immediate infrastructure deadline in the Australian payments calendar, with failure to be NPP-ready exposing super funds and employers to compliance risk under the new payday super regime.
Australian Payments Plus / ATO
RBA Payments System Board Amends Standards to Ban Card Surcharges from 1 October 2026
Following the Conclusions Paper published 31 March 2026, the RBA has amended Standards No. 1, 2 and 3 to implement surcharging reforms, prohibiting surcharges on Visa, Mastercard and eftpos transactions from 1 October 2026. The RBA estimates this will save consumers approximately A$1.6 billion annually, with AP+ confirming a zero-surcharge limit for eftpos transactions from that date.
Why it matters: Acquirers, merchants and payment processors must update surcharging logic, pricing models and merchant agreements before 30 September 2026 or face non-compliance with newly registered RBA Standards.
Reserve Bank of Australia
ASIC Digital Assets AFS Licence Deadline Expires 30 June 2026 — 15 Days Remaining
The Corporations Amendment (Digital Assets Framework) Act 2026 received Royal Assent on 8 April 2026 and commences 9 April 2027, but ASIC's no-action position for digital asset businesses operating without an AFS licence expires on 30 June 2026. Businesses that have not applied for a licence or variation by that date will be exposed to enforcement action.
Why it matters: Any payments or fintech business touching digital asset financial products in Australia faces an imminent and hard compliance deadline, after which ASIC's transitional enforcement forbearance ends.
ASIC
RBA Publications and Australian Payments Data
RBA Payments System Board Flags Quantum Computing Risks to Card Payments Cryptography
At its June 2026 meeting, the Payments System Board discussed emerging risks from advances in classical and quantum computing and approaches to strengthening cryptographic protections in card payments, alongside the full assessment of RITS. The Board also discussed unmet payment needs, digital money and the Advanced Encryption Standard.
Why it matters: The RBA's formal flagging of quantum computing as a cryptographic risk to card payments signals that infrastructure owners and card networks should begin post-quantum migration planning.
Reserve Bank of Australia
A2A Payments Vision Final Release Imminent — Industry Roadmap to Follow by End 2026
The Account-to-Account Payments Roundtable, comprising AusPayNet, AP+, the RBA and Treasury, closed public consultation on its draft A2A vision on 22 May 2026, with the final vision expected by mid-2026. The vision will inform an industry roadmap prioritising and sequencing deliverables, including the future of BECS, with no revised BECS end-date set pending the roadmap outcome.
Why it matters: The A2A vision and roadmap will set the strategic direction for account-to-account payments in Australia, directly affecting the timing and sequencing of BECS retirement and NPP capability investment.
Reserve Bank of Australia
RBA and DFCRC Release Project Acacia Final Report on Wholesale Tokenised Asset Markets
The RBA and Digital Finance Cooperative Research Centre released the Project Acacia final report in May 2026, examining how digital money and new settlement infrastructure built on distributed ledger technology can support tokenised asset markets in Australia. The RBA is considering next steps to support responsible innovation following the findings.
Why it matters: Project Acacia's conclusions will shape the RBA's approach to wholesale digital money and tokenised settlement infrastructure, with implications for Australian banks and financial market infrastructure operators.
Reserve Bank of Australia
AusPayNet FY25 Card Fraud Report: Fraud Falls to $854 Million but Overseas Threat Persists
In the 12 months to 30 June 2025, fraud on Australian payment cards decreased from $868 million to $854 million, with the overall card fraud rate also declining. AusPayNet highlights that overseas card fraud remains the key ongoing threat, with further industry effort required to mitigate it.
Why it matters: While aggregate fraud is declining, the persistent overseas fraud challenge underscores the need for ongoing investment in cross-border fraud controls ahead of the FY26 data release.
Australian Payments Network
ASIC and APRA Regulatory Releases
Federal Court Orders Record $300.2 Million Penalties Against CFD Issuer Union Standard
The Federal Court ordered record civil penalties totalling $300.2 million against collapsed CFD issuer Union Standard International Group and its former authorised representatives EuropeFX and TradeFred for systemic unconscionable conduct. The orders have been temporarily stayed until 13 July 2026 and represent the largest civil penalty in ASIC's history.
Why it matters: The record penalty under new ASIC Chair Sarah Court signals continued aggressive enforcement against retail financial product misconduct and raises the stakes for compliance across all licensed financial services businesses.
ASIC
ASIC Reissues RG 234 and Clarifies Enforcement Approach to Super Onboarding Advertising Ban
ASIC overhauled its advertising framework for financial products and services via an updated Regulatory Guide 234 on 9 June 2026, and separately clarified its transitional enforcement approach to the incoming prohibition on superannuation fund advertising during employee onboarding, effective 1 July 2026. The ban is specific to workplace onboarding and does not apply to general public advertising, with exemptions for MySuper products, employer default funds and an employee's existing fund.
Why it matters: Superannuation funds and their marketing and distribution teams must review onboarding workflows and advertising content to ensure compliance before the 1 July 2026 commencement date.
ASIC
ASIC REP 831: Super Trustees Failing on Death Benefits Claims Handling — 'Stragglers' Named
ASIC's progress review report REP 831 found that five of the ten superannuation trustees under review had not identified a single systemic issue from complaints data analysis across a period when overall complaints were rising. ASIC warned that ongoing weaknesses in death benefit claims handling risk undermining confidence in the industry's readiness to service Australia's ageing population.
Why it matters: Super trustees with unresolved death benefits claims handling deficiencies face heightened regulatory scrutiny and potential enforcement action as ASIC escalates focus on member outcomes.
ASIC
APRA Finalises New IRB Accreditation Pathway, Opening Credit Risk Modelling to More Banks
APRA has finalised a more accessible internal ratings-based (IRB) accreditation pathway for banks seeking to calculate credit risk-weighted assets using internal models, currently restricted to six of the largest banks. The new pathway is expected to appeal to mid-tier institutions such as Bendigo and Adelaide Bank and larger mutual banks.
Why it matters: Broader IRB accreditation could alter the competitive dynamics of bank capital efficiency, enabling mid-tier lenders to reduce risk-weighted asset burdens and price credit more competitively.
APRA
APRA Finalises Longevity Capital Reporting Template Ahead of 1 July 2026 Commencement
APRA confirmed it will implement the reporting template for longevity capital treatment with no amendments following consultation, as no industry submissions were received. The reforms take effect 1 July 2026, and life companies intending to adopt the Advanced Illiquidity Premium from that date must contact their APRA supervisor in advance.
Why it matters: Life insurers planning to use the AILP from 1 July 2026 face an imminent supervisor engagement requirement, with non-engagement potentially delaying adoption.
APRA
AusPayNet and NPPA Announcements
AP+ Confirms Zero-Surcharge Limit for eftpos Transactions from 1 October 2026
Australian Payments Plus has formally confirmed that a zero-surcharge limit will apply to eftpos transactions from 1 October 2026, aligning with the RBA's broader surcharging reform conclusions and the amended RBA Standards. AP+ has notified eftpos acquiring banks and their merchants of the requirement.
Why it matters: Acquirers that continue to apply eftpos surcharges after 30 September 2026 will be in direct breach of the amended RBA Standards, making this a hard system and contract remediation deadline.
Australian Payments Plus
Volt and Trade Nation Launch NPP Real-Time Payments for Australian Traders via PayTo
Volt and Trade Nation have gone live with real-time account-to-account payments for Australian retail traders via the NPP, delivered through Volt's partner Praxis with bank-grade infrastructure. The partnership intends to expand to a one-click PayTo experience in Australia and extend instant payment capabilities to the UK and EU.
Why it matters: Commercial go-lives of PayTo for retail trading platforms demonstrate the maturing NPP commercial ecosystem and signal growing demand for real-time A2A payment rails in high-frequency consumer use cases.
Australian FinTech
Australian Financial News
CDR Expansion to Non-Bank Lenders and BNPL Providers Goes Live 13 July 2026
From 13 July 2026, large non-bank lenders and BNPL providers will be subject to Consumer Data Right obligations, requiring product data sharing from go-live and consumer data sharing in four phases through to September 2027. The expansion brings non-bank data under the same security and privacy standards that apply to authorised deposit-taking institutions.
Why it matters: BNPL providers and non-bank lenders must be technically and operationally ready to share product data by 13 July 2026, with consumer data obligations commencing in phases from November 2026.
Australian Banking Association
Australia PSP Licensing Reform: Tranche 1 Treasury Laws Amendment Bill Advancing Through Parliament
Following the release of a significant PSP licensing reform consultation package in March 2026 and the close of submissions on 9 April 2026, the Treasury Laws Amendment Bill 2026 (Payments) is progressing toward introduction in Parliament. The reforms represent a fundamental reshaping of how payment service providers are regulated in Australia, with Tranche 2 considerations including access and industry standards to follow.
Why it matters: The new PSP licensing framework will require all payment service providers operating in Australia to assess whether their activities trigger licence obligations under the new regime and to plan for compliance ahead of commencement.
Gilbert + Tobin
Global Central Banks (BIS, Fed, ECB)
BIS Project Agorá: Tokenising Central Bank Reserves Proven to Accelerate Cross-Border Settlement
The BIS released findings from Project Agorá on 27 May 2026 confirming that tokenising central bank reserves alongside commercial bank deposits can enable atomic, round-the-clock multi-currency settlement for wholesale cross-border payments. The project involved seven central banks and 40 financial institutions and found that the approach could significantly improve the speed and reliability of cross-border payments.
Why it matters: Project Agorá's findings directly inform the RBA's Project Acacia work and raise the prospect of Australian banks needing to engage with tokenised reserve infrastructure to remain competitive in wholesale cross-border payments.
BIS / CoinDesk
ECB Digital Euro Pilot PSP Selection Underway After Application Window Closed 14 May 2026
The ECB's call for payment service providers to participate in its digital euro pilot closed on 14 May 2026, with selection now focused on ensuring representative coverage of the euro area by size, geography and market reach. The pilot builds toward the digital euro's prospective launch and will generate real-world operational data on PSP integration with a central bank digital currency.
Why it matters: The ECB digital euro pilot's PSP selection and operational findings will establish implementation patterns that are likely to inform any future Australian retail CBDC design and participation frameworks.
European Central Bank
BIS Project Nexus Expands to Indonesia Ahead of 2026 Go-Live for Instant Cross-Border Retail Payments
Project Nexus, led by the BIS with central banks from Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, Singapore and India, expanded in February 2026 to include Indonesia, with Nexus Global Payments appointing its first Board Chair ahead of a planned 2026 go-live. The platform processes cross-border retail payments within 60 seconds by standardising connections between national instant payment systems.
Why it matters: As Australia's major trading partners and near-neighbours join Nexus, pressure will grow on Australian regulators and the NPP to establish interoperability pathways with the Nexus network.
The Asian Banker / BIS
Global Fintech and Payments Industry
Visa and Mastercard US$38 Billion Swipe Fee Settlement Receives Preliminary US Court Approval
A US federal judge granted preliminary approval to the US$38 billion Visa and Mastercard interchange fee settlement on 9–10 June 2026, resolving longstanding merchant claims of overcharging on swipe fees. Final approval proceedings are expected to follow, marking a potentially decisive conclusion to one of the most significant antitrust disputes in card payments history.
Why it matters: The settlement establishes a global precedent for interchange fee constraints that could embolden regulators and merchants in Australia and other markets to pursue further reductions beyond the RBA's existing surcharging reforms.
Reuters / BNN Bloomberg
New York DFS Proposes Stablecoin Rules Aligned to Federal GENIUS Act Framework
New York DFS Acting Superintendent Kaitlin Asrow announced proposed regulations on 9 June 2026 to harmonise New York's stablecoin framework with the new federal GENIUS Act requirements for US dollar-backed stablecoin issuance. The move positions New York DFS to seek certification as a compliant state-level regulator under the federal framework.
Why it matters: The GENIUS Act and New York's aligned state framework will establish the dominant international regulatory template for stablecoin issuance, directly shaping the compliance environment for any Australian stablecoin regime under the Digital Assets Framework Act 2026.
New York Department of Financial Services
Money20/20 Europe 2026: Payments M&A Consolidation Accelerates and eIDAS 2.0 Digital Wallets Loom
Money20/20 Europe 2026 in Amsterdam was dominated by M&A consolidation themes, including Global Payments' US$24.25 billion acquisition of Worldpay and Mollie's €1.05 billion acquisition of GoCardless. A key forward-looking theme was the eIDAS 2.0 requirement for all EU governments to make certified digital identity wallets available to citizens by November 2026, with banks and payment institutions required to accept them for strong customer authentication.
Why it matters: The eIDAS 2.0 digital identity wallet mandate and accelerating global payments consolidation are structural shifts that will influence how Australian regulators and payments businesses approach digital identity and competitive strategy.
Payment Expert