Site icon MacTech.com

Australia’s CBA wants to force Apple to offer ‘more attractive terms’ for Apple Pay

The Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) wants the company’s Reserve Bank of Australia to deploy its new powers, granted by Canberra last year, to pursue Apple’s growing dominance in the market for digital wallets, as the European Union regulator has done, reports the Financial Review (a subscription is required to read the entire article).

CBA has told a parliamentary committee that the RBA should use amendments to the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act, passed in federal parliament last year, to force Apple to open up its mobile payments system on more attractive terms to other digital wallets, including banking apps, the article adds.

This is a issue that’s been brewing for some time. In August 2025 The Australian reported that Apple may face a battle with Australia’s Reserve Bank over who gets to control access to a major gateway of the payments system.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) is Australia’s central bank and banknote issuing authority. It has had this role since 14 January 1960, when the Reserve Bank Act 1959 removed the central banking functions from the Commonwealth Bank

The Australian said Apple is deciding whether it argue its its case in the central bank’s efforts to crack down on card surcharging. The tech giant argues that it’s not part of the payments system.

In July 2025 the RBA outlined plans to crack down on the $1.2 billion Australians pay in credit and debit card surcharges every year. The central bank is seeking submissions to its planned overhaul until the end of this month.

The Australian notes that Apple Pay “might sit on top and technically outside the payments system” but “still has significant clout. Apple charges banks large fees for the right to have their cards sit in the digital wallet.” While Apple doesn’t directly charge fees to consumers, the fees it charges banks are passed along the payments chain and ultimately trickle down to consumers. 

The RBA expects that Apple Pay will be part of its surcharging crackdown from mid-next year. The Australian said that the central bank’s view is it will be up to the banks or merchants to absorb the cost of the Apple Pay transaction “but this doesn’t solve the problem of who gets access or put pressure on Apple to lower its own fees.”

I hope you’ll help support Apple World Today by becoming a patron. Almost all our income is from Patreon support and sponsored posts. Patreon pricing ranges from $2 to $10 a month. Thanks in advance for your support. 




Article provided with permission from AppleWorld.Today
Exit mobile version