Regulation of Payment Service Providers –Tranche 1 draft legislation - Consult hub

https://treasury.gov.au/consultation/c2026-746108
Success
Service Third-Party Providers 88% Payment Processors 75%
Specialism Prudential Standards 85% Supervision 80%
2026-03-16 11:50:07 · pthandapani@vixio.com
ID
2958288
GUID
8c3df3c490a3c67710da3fb5ae82df57

Classification

Service
Third-Party Providers (88%)

The draft legislation establishes a new regulatory framework for payment service providers in Australia, covering licensing obligations, safeguarding requirements, and prudential rules that directly govern PSP operations and conduct.

Payment Processors (75%)

The framework's emphasis on safeguarding requirements for payment-related money and e-payments code rules also touches on broader payment infrastructure governance relevant to payment processors and service providers.

Specialism
Prudential Standards (85%)

The draft legislation establishes a new prudential framework and safeguarding requirements for payment-related money held by PSPs, which directly addresses financial soundness and fund protection standards.

Supervision (80%)

The consultation introduces licensing obligations and regulatory oversight mechanisms for payment service providers, representing the supervisory framework governing PSPs.

Give feedback on draft legislation for a new regulatory framework for payment service providers.

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TITLE: Australia's Treasury Releases Draft Tranche 1 Legislation on Payment Service Provider Regulation BODY: On March 12, 2026, Australia's Treasury released the full package of draft Tranche 1 legislation for a new regulatory framework governing payment service providers. This consultation follows feedback from the earlier Tranche 1a consultation, which ran from October 9 to November 6, 2025, and addressed core concepts and licensing obligations. The draft legislation covers several key areas: definitions of regulated payment functions; licensing obligations, including safeguarding requirements for payment-related money; exemptions and exclusions; rules for unclaimed monies; a new prudential framework; powers to make rules for a mandatory and revised ePayments Code; and transitional arrangements. The Treasury has also released an early, partial draft of exemption and exclusion regulations alongside the primary legislation. The consultation package comprises four parts of exposure drafts, supported by explanatory materials, a factsheet, and draft regulations with accompanying explanatory materials. All documents are available in both PDF and Word formats. Payment service providers and other stakeholders must submit responses through the Treasury's consultation website. The consultation closes on April 9, 2026. Respondents are encouraged to review supporting documents and submission guidelines before preparing their responses in Word (DOCX or RTF) or PDF format. Submissions must include agreement to the Treasury's privacy collection statement. For further information or technical assistance with submissions, stakeholders can contact the Treasury at Paymentslicensingconsultation@treasury.gov.au.
  • Scraped:2026-03-16 11:50:07
  • Created:2026-03-16 11:50:06
  • By:pthandapani@vixio.com (6)