Card payment sucharges banned in Australia from 2026

It’s one thing to ban surcharging, it’s another matter to reduce interchange to where it can’t fund reward programs which is why they’re going away.
 
If the interchange fees are indeed “funding” rewards programmes then that tells you they are overpriced.

That said, when I got sent my Platinum card, I didn’t realise at the time that meant the merchant fees charged by the provider were “doubled”

So it’s not always obvious who’s profit gouging out of the system. But it sure ain’t a case of covering the “cost of acceptance”. If we were to start that argument, then cash banknotes would need to incur a “cost of acceptance” as that’s not a “free” service to the banking system. Rather it’s a service where the fees are “covered by the provider”
 
I don’t know what it is, but there must be something fundamentally different about Australia’s banking system compared to other countries. Which is odd because on the surface it seems like the same Visa and Mastercard issued cards that you get almost everywhere on earth.

I’ve travelled extensively and the surcharging epidemic hasn’t reached other countries. It’s got out of control in Australia while in most other places it’s still rare to see a surcharge, or was outright banned years ago.

The other thing I’ve noticed is outside of Australia, restaurants and cafes are more than happy to split bills and take payments across multiple cards, separately from everyone on the table. Ask to do that in Australia and you get treated like you asked for a kidney. I wonder if it’s something to do with keeping the number of card transactions to a minimum.
 
If the interchange fees are indeed “funding” rewards programmes then that tells you they are overpriced.

That said, when I got sent my Platinum card, I didn’t realise at the time that meant the merchant fees charged by the provider were “doubled”
I think the whole thing about giving us metal coloured cards is to make us feel ‘special’ as well as getting a higher merchant fee as suddenly that’s a ‘premium’ card.

If the banks are giving us rewards funded out of interchange, then their profit margin as well as costs like bad debts, etc also need to come out of that funding. I’m assuming that’s why they’re stomping (without much effect or sympathy from the RBA) their feet about about removing rewards and other benefits.

There’s not room for everything in the reduced funding envelope. We can feel as smug as we like about it but the banks aren’t charities and they’ll be fine. Cashless is ingrained in our culture so the rewards points were partially to encourage us to use them for everyday transactions. We might just switch our activity and behavior to eftpos. We’re now cashless. Mission accomplished!
 
If the banks are giving us rewards funded out of interchange, then their profit margin as well as costs like bad debts, etc also need to come out of that funding. I’m assuming that’s why they’re stomping (without much effect or sympathy from the RBA) their feet about about removing rewards and other benefits.
Don’t forget that bad debts are funded out of interest rate margins as well. When charging 20% interest and offering at most 4.5% for deposits (or charging 6% for mortgages), there’s a bit of wiggle room there.
 
Avocado on toast should cost the same on each and every day of the year.
Why?

A restaurant I visit often has a lunch menu and dinner menu. The dishes on offer are mostly the same, and the portion sizes are the same, but the prices on the dinner menu are about 30% higher. If you never visit at lunchtime you'd never know.

I don't go there on weekends so I wouldn't know if they have Sunday menus with higher prices too.

You can see the prices before you make a decision to go in.

My kids have an infrequent lemonade stall outside my house on hot Sundays. They use Square. Even that is 1.9% for Amex. If you’re charging 2.75%, you either can’t negotiate or taking the piss out of the public.

When you can pass the charges on like this, why would you bother to negotiate. Unless a sizeable portion of your customers tell you that if you don't accept Amex at the same price as Visa/MC they won't buy from you at all. And how often does that happen?

If the government mandates that you display the same price for cash/eftpos/Visa/MC/Amex, then you do have to negotiate with Amex or stop accepting it.

Which is exactly what happened in the UK - Amex merchant fees are now around 1.5-2% for those merchants who have threatened to stop taking Amex, or they have stopped taking Amex (because Amex prefers not to be accepted at those shops over reducing their fee). Some merchants are still paying 3-4% to Amex because they can't be bothered, or Amex spenders genuinely are spending more there to cover the fee (which was the rationale Amex gave to justify its high fee in the past).

I don’t know what it is, but there must be something fundamentally different about Australia’s banking system compared to other countries. Which is odd because on the surface it seems like the same Visa and Mastercard issued cards that you get almost everywhere on earth.

The other thing I’ve noticed is outside of Australia, restaurants and cafes are more than happy to split bills and take payments across multiple cards, separately from everyone on the table. Ask to do that in Australia and you get treated like you asked for a kidney. I wonder if it’s something to do with keeping the number of card transactions to a minimum.
For context, I spent my early childhood in Aus then lived abroad in many different places (majority of the time being in London), until a few years ago when I returned to Aus aged 35.

To be clear, I still think Aus is the best country for me to live in right now. But the longer I spend here as an adult, the more and more I feel like your first sentence applies to almost everything about this country and I really don't understand why Australians have a reputation overseas of being easy-going.

In the UK I believe many merchants are on a flat fee + % model for their card charges, which would mean they prefer to minimise the number of transactions, yet as you say it's rare to encounter resistance to splitting restaurant bills. In the UK I've done it with a table of 15 where everyone paid individually. The waiter got a bit annoyed when some of our party didn't want to pay for other people's expensive drinks, but I dealt with that by getting everyone to pay the restaurant the same amount and then making some people bank transfer/cash to others (fortunately I can calculate this stuff quickly and everyone was satisfied) :)
 
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I don’t know what it is, but there must be something fundamentally different about Australia’s banking system compared to other countries. Which is odd because on the surface it seems like the same Visa and Mastercard issued cards that you get almost everywhere on earth.
The ban on surcharging was typically within the scheme (Visa or Mastercard) rules. What the RBA did years ago was basically banned the schemes from having that restriction in their rules. In other countries, the schemes probably still have that restriction in their rules.
 

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