RBA Surcharge Reform · Effective 1 October 2026

The surcharge is going. The cost is not.

From 1 October 2026, you can no longer add a card surcharge to a customer’s bill. But the cost of accepting cards does not disappear. Interchange, scheme fees and acquirer margin all remain. They simply move into your margin. The only real question is how much, and whether your payments are built to keep it low.

1 Oct 2026

When card surcharging ends, across in-store, online and phone payments.

4 networks

Visa, Mastercard and eftpos must comply. American Express has confirmed it will also align.

1–1.5% of revenue

The card cost that now lands on your margin, not your customers.

What actually changes

Here is what comes into effect in October, in plain terms, without the jargon.

01

Card surcharges go

From 1 October, Visa, Mastercard and eftpos are required to remove card surcharging, and American Express has confirmed it will also align from the same date. There is no exception for a “reasonable” surcharge. Other networks have not yet announced their position.

02

Interchange caps fall, but you might not feel it

The wholesale cost built into card payments, interchange, is being capped lower. Whether that saving reaches you depends entirely on how you are priced.

03

POS and hardware can’t hide in a surcharge

Bundling terminal, software and equipment costs into a card fee is no longer possible. Those costs do not vanish. They become visible.

04

Fees come into the open

From October, your acquirer (the company that processes your card payments) must publish its fees every quarter. Opaque pricing has nowhere left to sit.

05

The cost becomes invisible to customers

No line on the receipt means no prompt, for them or for you, to check what card acceptance is actually costing. Easy to overlook, and easy to overpay.

Why it matters

A compliance task on the surface. A margin decision underneath.

If you surcharge today, that 1–1.5% was never really yours to keep. Removing it lands the cost squarely on your P&L. And if your POS bundles software and hardware into payments, unbundling can turn one invisible cost into three visible ones: a processing fee, a software subscription and a hardware rental.

Most businesses will treat October as a box to tick: update the terminal, remove the surcharge, move on. The ones who come out ahead will use it as a reason to look properly at how their payments are built, not just what they cost on the surface.

What to look for in a provider

A provider gives you a rate.
A strategy gives you a structure.

A terminal and a rate is not a payments strategy. It is infrastructure. A strategy starts with your transaction profile, your card mix, volume and channels, and designs around it. Zero Payments has worked with Australian merchants for nearly 20 years, through every regulatory shift. As a Tyro ISO Platinum Partner, we work with a single acquirer chosen deliberately for transparent pricing, strong least-cost routing, and a platform built for Australian business.

100%

Card acceptance and card-payment availability across the last four quarters, on the Tyro network.

99.99%

Reported online platform uptime over the past three years.

Published

The RBA now requires providers to publish reliability data. Tyro does, and so do we, as a Tyro ISO Platinum Partner.

A fair question to ask any provider: can they show you their reliability data? Many can’t. A number of payment facilitators and international acquirers don’t publish it at all.

“We came in to tick a box. We left with a blueprint to cut our payment costs and protect our margin. Zero took our strategy further than the surcharge change itself.

Zero Payments top 10 hospitality customer

A straightforward starting point

See exactly where you stand before October.

An independent review of your current payments: your rates, pricing model and card mix. Around 30 minutes. No cost, no obligation, no lock-in. You’ll leave with a clear picture, and a number that’s yours, not a headline.

  • The 5-step guide to October 1, yours to download the moment you submit
  • A no-cost, no-obligation review of where you stand
  • Bring your last two or three merchant statements, that’s all we need

Surcharge Ready guide + Free Review

We’ll only use your details for the guide and to arrange your review. No spam, no lock-in.