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Kat Wong

Financial complaints surge as cost of living bites

AFCA boss David Locke says increasing reports reflected the cost of living crisis. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

Every two minutes, Australians made a complaint about financial services, with reports involving monetary hardship surging as cost of living pressures loomed large.

The Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) received more than 100,000 complaints from consumers and small businesses between 2022 and 2023, a 23 per cent increase on the year before.

Reports about scams nearly doubled from 4611 to about 9000, while complaints about financial hardship were up 29 per cent on the previous year.

AFCA chief ombudsman and executive David Locke said this reflected the cost of living crisis and increasing interest rates.

"The volume of complaints escalated to AFCA has been increasing at an unsustainable rate," he said.

Australians complained most about unauthorised transactions, delays in claim handling, service quality, claim amounts and denials of claims, with the latter jumping 50 per cent.

Personal transaction accounts were also a major source of irritation, with the number of reports surging by 64 per cent to 16,028.

In some good news, Australians received more than $304 million in compensation and refunds after lodging complaints, a 38 per cent increase on the previous year. 

But Mr Locke said the industry needed to do more to improve customer satisfaction and address frustrations quickly in-house.

"We believe many financial firms could be doing a better job of handling complaints within their own internal complaints processes, so only the most complex cases reach AFCA - which is the role we are meant to play," he said.

"Instead, the volume of complaints reaching us is putting unnecessary pressure on the external dispute resolution system and inevitably causing further delays for consumers."

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