Australia’s Commonwealth Bank (CBA) Turns on PayTo for Recurring Payments

Commonwealth Bank (CBA) has become the “first” major Australian bank to enable PayTo payments for CBA customers – a new digital way “to authorize payments from a CBA bank account, and the latest initiative from New Payments Platform Australia (NPPA).”

As part of the PayTo payer functionality, eligible CBA customers will be able “to manage one-off or recurring new PayTo payment agreements within the security of the CommBank App and NetBank, including the ability to view, authorize, pause or cancel payment agreements.”

Eligible customers “include CBA retail and business customers who can access NetBank and/or the CommBank App and have a CBA bank account that CBA has determined to be an eligible bank account to make PayTo payments.”

This PayTo payer capability can “help provide more control over payments that come directly from CBA customers’ bank accounts, including for regular bills, subscriptions and one-off payments.” It may also “reduce fraud, as each new digital PayTo payment agreement is authorised through secure banking platforms such as the CommBank App and NetBank.”

In another first for a major Australian bank, CBA has also “completed a successful PayTo trial with two business customers, Telstra and The Shepherd Centre.” CBA partnered with Paypa Plane “to trial PayTo for these business customers, enabling them to each create a PayTo payment agreement and receive a payment.”

Telstra used PayTo to “create a payment agreement to enable a customer to make a bill payment, and The Shepherd Centre – a disability service provider for children with hearing loss – used PayTo to create a payment agreement to enable a donor to make a donation.”

CBA Executive General Manager Payments, Ethan Teas, said:

“PayTo has the potential to revolutionise payments in Australia. We’re delighted to be at the forefront of this as the first major Australian bank to offer the PayTo capabilities for our payer customers, and to trial the capabilities for our business customers. Innovation is at the core of what we’re doing to support Australians to pay and to get paid and PayTo could set the foundations for significant innovation across Australia’s payments system. The trial transactions we have undertaken with two of our business customers are proof of the benefits that could be on offer to the broader business community, and we look forward to working with our partners to make PayTo a force for positive change in the months and years ahead.”

Telstra Finance Executive, Steven Fousekas, said:

“Our customers want payments to be simple, safe and fast. They have busy lives and want clear visibility of any payments they have set-up, and the ability to make changes quickly and easily. We are always looking for ways to make billing and payments even simpler for our customers, and this trial is part of that.”

CEO of The Shepherd Centre, Jim Hungerford, said:

“The Shepherd Centre has received long-standing support from the Commonwealth Bank so we were delighted to participate in the PayTo trial.  The Shepherd Centre is “an early intervention service for children with hearing loss and the support we provide is reliant on donations from the public.”

The team hopes PayTo will offer their supporters “a new way to make donations in the future and [they[ are excited to be one of the first charities in Australia, if not the first, to receive a donation via PayTo as part of CBA’s trial.”

As PayTo for payee CBA business customers is in the trial phase, “it is not currently widely available.” CBA plans “to expand the trial with Telstra, The Shepherd Centre and additional select CBA business customers who meet CBA’s eligibility requirements.”

When PayTo is fully launched, eligible CBA business customers will be able “to establish PayTo payment agreements as an alternative to direct debit arrangements as well as third party initiated payments like salary disbursements.” CBA business customers may also be able “to accept PayTo payments in eCommerce environments as an alternative to credit and debit card payments.”

With PayTo, CBA business customers may be able “to reduce the costs and delays associated with failed payments, as well as improve cash flow and reconciliation because digital PayTo payment agreements allow for near real-time payment processing, contain more information and data than traditional direct debits and requires payer customers to authorise the PayTo payment agreement.”

CBA’s partnership with fintech Paypa Plane is “part of the Group’s continued investment in its payment ecosystems and the New Payments Platform (NPP).”

Mr Teas added:

“We will continue to invest and innovate, working with our partners, to deliver exceptional payment experiences for our customers. The NPP, and in particular PayID® and PayTo, creates the opportunity to build digital, safe, fast, and efficient payment experiences that delight and benefit our customers.” 



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