AFS licensees must have a dispute resolution system that consists of:
Internal dispute resolution (IDR)
Regulatory Guide 271 Internal dispute resolution (RG 271) sets out how financial firms that are required to comply with IDR requirements can meet their obligations. The requirements relate to matters such as how firms must record and respond to complaints, and the timeframes for doing so.
Most financial firms with IDR obligations under RG 271 will also need to report IDR data to ASIC.
External dispute resolution (EDR)
The Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) is the single dispute resolution scheme for financial services. AFCA may be able to resolve complaints that a financial firm could not resolve using internal dispute resolution.
AFCA considers complaints that were previously handled by the Financial Ombudsman Service, the Credit and Investments Ombudsman and the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal.
AFCA can consider complaints about:
- credit, finance and loans
- insurance
- banking deposits and payments
- investments and financial advice, and
- superannuation.
When AFS licensees join AFCA, they must notify ASIC within 10 business days. If they are not a member of AFCA, they are in breach of their licence obligations. Regulatory Guide 267 Oversight of the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (RG 267) sets out who must have a dispute resolution system and which financial firms must be members of AFCA.
For more information, see Dispute resolution.
Notifying ASIC of changes to your AFCA membership
You must inform ASIC in writing about changes to your AFCA membership.
This includes circumstances where:
- you fail to renew your AFCA membership
- you no longer require AFCA membership, or
- AFCA has terminated your membership of the scheme.
Dispute resolution and consumers
Information about dispute resolution for consumers can be found in ASIC Information Sheet 174 Disputes with financial firms (INFO 174) and on our consumer website Moneysmart.
Australian financial services (AFS) licensees have obligations to compensate consumers who have suffered from non-compliant financial advice. For more information, see: