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posted 2 hours ago
Last updated: 24 June 2026
The Unfair Trading Practices Bill Australia, formally the Competition and Consumer Amendment (Unfair Trading Practices) Bill 2026, was introduced into Parliament on 5 May 2026 and represents the most significant expansion of the Australian Consumer Law (ACL) in over a decade. Drawing on an earlier Treasury exposure draft that proposed a commencement date of 1 July 2027 if passed, the Bill inserts a broad, principles-based prohibition on unfair trading practices into the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (CCA). For in-house counsel, compliance officers and company directors, the window between now and commencement is the critical period for gap analysis, policy overhaul and board-level governance action.
This guide delivers the practical compliance playbook that most law-firm alerts leave out, covering the legal test, ACCC enforcement powers, director liability exposure, a 90-day remediation roadmap and an investigation-response playbook.
The Bill creates a general prohibition against unfair trading practices in trade or commerce, enforceable by the ACCC through civil pecuniary penalties, injunctions and compensation orders. It sits alongside, and does not replace, the existing prohibitions on misleading or deceptive conduct (s 18 ACL) and unconscionable conduct (ss 20–22 ACL). According to the Parliamentary Bills Digest published on 5 May 2026, the centrepiece is a two-limbed test that asks whether conduct is contrary to professional diligence and materially distorts, or is likely to materially distort, the economic behaviour of consumers.
Top 5 immediate actions for boards:
The Australian consumer law amendments introduced by this Bill are designed to close a recognised gap: conduct that falls short of the high threshold for unconscionability under the existing ACL, yet still causes widespread consumer harm. The Law Council of Australia’s submission on the exposure draft acknowledged the gap while urging precision in drafting to avoid over-capture of legitimate commercial practices. The Bill addresses this by inserting a new Part 2-4 into the ACL.
The prohibition is principles-based and constructed around two cumulative limbs. First, the conduct must be contrary to the requirements of professional diligence, meaning it falls below the standard of skill and care that a trader could reasonably be expected to exercise toward consumers, consistent with honest market practice and good faith. Second, the conduct must materially distort, or be likely to materially distort, the economic behaviour of consumers, including causing a consumer to make a transactional decision they would not otherwise have made. Both limbs must be satisfied for a contravention to be established. This mirrors the unfair commercial practices framework used in the European Union and the United Kingdom but is adapted to the Australian statutory context.
While the prohibition is general, the Treasury exposure draft and explanatory materials identify several categories of conduct as squarely within its scope:
| Amendment | Where Inserted | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| General prohibition on unfair trading practices | New Part 2-4 of the ACL (Schedule 2 of the CCA) | Creates a standalone cause of action that does not require proof of unconscionability or misleading conduct |
| Definition of “professional diligence” | New section within Part 2-4 | Sets the benchmark for trader conduct, honest market practice and good faith toward consumers |
| Definition of “material distortion” | New section within Part 2-4 | Targets conduct that appreciably impairs a consumer’s ability to make an informed transactional decision |
| Expanded ACCC enforcement and remedy provisions | Amendments to Part 5-2 of the CCA | Extends existing civil penalty, injunction and compensation order powers to cover the new prohibition |
The Bill applies to conduct in trade or commerce, the same jurisdictional gateway used by the existing ACL. This means that any business supplying goods or services to consumers in Australia, including online and cross-border suppliers, falls within scope. There is no turnover threshold or small-business exemption. Sectors that industry observers expect the ACCC to prioritise include e-commerce platforms, fintech and buy-now-pay-later providers, energy retailing, telecommunications, lead-generation affiliates and businesses operating in the regulated financial services sector where conduct may not be caught by ASIC’s parallel powers.
Businesses operating through crypto and digital-asset platforms in Australia should pay particular attention, as the Treasury exposure draft identifies digital markets as a priority enforcement area.
| Milestone | Date / Status | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Bill introduced into Parliament | 5 May 2026 | Begin internal gap analysis immediately |
| Parliamentary committee review and debate | Mid-2026 (subject to parliamentary timetable) | Monitor amendments; update gap analysis if scope changes |
| Expected Royal Assent | Late 2026 – early 2027 (subject to passage) | Finalise compliance program and board approvals |
| Proposed commencement (per Treasury exposure draft) | 1 July 2027 | All policies, contracts and training must be in force by this date |
The practical effect is that businesses have approximately twelve months from today to achieve full compliance, assuming the Bill passes without material amendment. Early indications suggest bipartisan support for the core prohibition, meaning the commencement date is unlikely to be delayed significantly.
The Bill extends the ACCC’s existing ACL enforcement toolkit to cover the new prohibition. This means ACCC unfair trading enforcement will draw on the same suite of remedies that the regulator already uses in misleading-conduct and unconscionability cases, but applied to a broader category of conduct.
The ACCC will be empowered to seek:
Industry observers expect the ACCC to use the new prohibition strategically, targeting high-profile sectors first to establish judicial precedent and send a market-wide compliance signal. The Financial Counselling Australia submission urged the ACCC to prioritise vulnerable-consumer industries, including payday lending, energy retailing and aged-care services.
| Entity Type | Maximum Pecuniary Penalty | Additional Remedies Available |
|---|---|---|
| Body corporate | Greater of $50 million, 3× benefit obtained, or 30% of adjusted turnover | Injunctions, compensation orders, adverse publicity, compliance programs |
| Individual (including officers) | Up to $2.5 million per contravention | Disqualification orders, injunctions, personal liability for compensation |
Importantly, a robust, pre-existing compliance program is treated by the courts as a mitigating factor when determining penalty amounts. This gives businesses a tangible financial incentive to act now rather than wait for enforcement action.
The intersection of the new unfair trading prohibition with existing director duties under the Corporations Act 2001 creates a distinct governance risk. Directors have a duty under s 180 to exercise their powers with the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in their position would exercise. Where a board is aware, or should reasonably be aware, that the company’s trading practices may contravene the new prohibition, a failure to take adequate steps could expose directors personally.
Director duties under consumer law require particular attention in the following circumstances:
Businesses undergoing structural changes such as insolvency or restructuring face heightened exposure, because governance scrutiny intensifies during those periods.
| Reporting Obligation | Who Is Responsible | Typical Evidence to Keep |
|---|---|---|
| Incident or conduct review (internal) | Compliance Officer / Legal | Incident report, timestamps, remediation steps, communications |
| Board escalation and minutes | Company Secretary / Board | Board papers, minutes recording legal advice and decisions |
| External notifications (if required) | CEO / General Counsel | Notification letters, regulatory correspondence, remediation plan |
| Contractual supplier action | Commercial team / Legal | Supplier audits, contract clauses invoked, remediation records |
Sample board minute language: “The Board received and considered a briefing from [General Counsel] on the Competition and Consumer Amendment (Unfair Trading Practices) Bill 2026. The Board noted the proposed new prohibition and the company’s exposure to the two-limbed test. The Board approved [the compliance remediation plan / updated compliance program] and directed management to report on implementation progress at the next Board meeting.”
Knowing how to comply with the ACL after the Bill commences requires a structured, time-bound program. The following 90-day roadmap is designed for compliance teams managing business compliance under the ACL and can be adapted to businesses of any size.
Three sample clauses that compliance teams should consider integrating into relevant agreements:
Businesses navigating regulatory change across multiple frameworks, including trust tax changes in Australia, should consider integrating ACL compliance reviews into broader governance calendars to avoid duplication of effort.
Even businesses with robust compliance programs may receive ACCC inquiries. The following playbook outlines the recommended response protocol for unfair trading practices Australia investigations.
Step 1: Preserve documents immediately. Issue a litigation-hold notice to all relevant business units. Ensure that electronic records, communications, marketing materials, customer complaints and internal audit reports are preserved.
Step 2: Assert legal professional privilege. Ensure that all internal communications about the inquiry are marked as privileged and routed through legal counsel. Do not disclose privileged material to the ACCC without specific legal advice.
Step 3: Appoint a response team. The team should include General Counsel, the Compliance Officer, a senior commercial representative and an external communications adviser. Designate a single point of contact for all ACCC correspondence.
Step 4: Assess exposure and remediation options. Determine whether the conduct in question is ongoing or historic. If ongoing, cease the conduct immediately and document the remediation. The ACCC treats voluntary, prompt remediation as a significant mitigating factor.
Step 5: Engage with the ACCC constructively. Where appropriate, enter into co-operative discussions with the ACCC about enforceable undertakings or consent orders. Courts have consistently recognised co-operation as a penalty-reduction factor.
Where an ACCC investigation escalates to litigation, businesses may also need to understand the broader framework for challenging government action in Australian courts, including judicial review principles and procedural requirements.
The Competition and Consumer Amendment (Unfair Trading Practices) Bill 2026 is not a distant prospect, it is live legislation moving through Parliament with broad support. Businesses that begin compliance work now will benefit from reduced penalty exposure, stronger governance records and the operational advantage of having systems in place before enforcement begins. The principles-based nature of the new prohibition means that every consumer-facing practice must be assessed against the two-limbed test of professional diligence and material distortion.
Boards should ensure that their next meeting agenda includes a formal briefing on the Bill, approval of a remediation plan, and documented minutes of the discussion. Compliance teams should initiate the 90-day roadmap outlined above without delay. For businesses seeking tailored advice, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects you with competition and consumer law specialists across Australia who can guide your organisation through every stage of preparation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact David Grace at Cooper Grace Ward, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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