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Enter your mobile to get startedLast Updated: September 2025
PayTo is the replacement for Australia’s ageing Direct Debit system. It fundamentally changes how Australians authorise businesses, utility providers, and subscription services to pull money from their bank accounts.
The critical change is control. Instead of handing over your BSB and account number to a merchant and hoping they do the right thing, you must approve a digital ‘payment agreement’ inside your own secure banking app or internet banking portal before any money moves.
It is a significant modernisation of the payments infrastructure, built on the New Payments Platform (NPP); the same technology that enables instant bank transfers using PayID.
As of September 2025, the rollout across Australian banks is largely complete. The focus is now on migrating existing Direct Debits over to this new system before the old infrastructure is shut down, currently scheduled for 2030.
PayTo is integrated directly into your existing banking app or internet banking portal. You don’t need to download anything new.
Setting up a new agreement
When a business asks you to set up a recurring payment, they will initiate a PayTo agreement.
Managing your agreements
Once a PayTo agreement is active, it appears in a dedicated section of your banking app.
Important note: Pausing or cancelling a PayTo agreement stops the money from leaving your account. It does not cancel your contract with the merchant. If you still owe the money, you must arrange an alternative payment method or formally cancel the service with the provider.
The current widely used system, the Bulk Electronic Clearing System (BECS), which powers traditional Direct Debit, is decades old. It was built long before the internet was mainstream and while it still works really well, it does lack the speed, data capability, and security required for a modern digital economy.
As one primary example, the BECS system processes payments in batches at set times during the day. This can lead to delays and causes uncertainty. A payment initiated on Friday might not clear until Tuesday morning. PayTo, running on the NPP, processes payments instantly, 24/7.
The difference between the two systems is profound, shifting the balance of power back towards the account holder.
Authority and control
With Direct Debit, the authority is established upfront and usually a set and forget feature, therefore you may have less visibility ongoing. You also have limited ability to stop the authority without contacting the merchant first or asking your bank to intervene, all of which can take time.
With PayTo, the authority resides with you, via your bank, and you agree upfront how much merchants can debit you for and the period of time the agreement will be in place. You’ll also have ongoing visibility of this agreement in your banking app, and can choose to pause of revoke the authority instantly.
Data and validation
Direct Debit provides minimal data. If you enter the wrong BSB or account number when setting it up, the merchant won’t know until the first payment fails, often resulting in dishonour fees.
PayTo is data-rich and validated. When a PayTo agreement is created, the system instantly verifies that the account details are correct before the agreement is sent to you for authorisation.
The ‘payment agreement’ is the foundation of the PayTo system. It is a digital record stored centrally. When reviewing a PayTo agreement in your banking app, it is critical to check the terms carefully, as this is your point of control.
The features of PayTo offer tangible advantages for managing household finances, particularly when cash flow is tight.
Avoiding dishonour fees
Dishonour fees, charged when a scheduled debit fails due to insufficient funds, are a persistent financial burden. Because PayTo provides visibility, you can see exactly when a debit is scheduled. If you know the funds won’t be available, you can proactively discuss with the merchant to pause the payment before it fails, avoiding the fee and giving you time to manage the situation.
Subscription and repayment management
It is easy to lose track of ongoing subscriptions or various repayment schedules. PayTo centralises these agreements. This applies to everything from streaming services to loan repayments. For instance, repayments for services like a PressPay Advance can be managed via PayTo, giving users a clear view of their repayment schedule alongside their other commitments. It makes ‘subscription audits’ simple.
Security against ‘bill shock’
If a merchant attempts to debit your account outside the agreed terms, the PayTo system blocks it. If you authorised $50 per month, they cannot suddenly debit $75 without your prior approval. This prevents unexpected hits to your account balance.
PayTo is inherently more secure than Direct Debit because the authorisation happens within the user’s own secure banking environment, using bank-grade security, which may include multi-factor authentication.
However, the shift to digital authorisation introduces new avenues for scammers.
The primary risk is being tricked into authorising a fraudulent PayTo agreement. Scammers may send phishing emails or SMS messages impersonating legitimate businesses (like major telcos or energy providers), attempting to coerce you into approving an agreement.
Staying secure:
The transition to PayTo is gaining momentum, but it is far from complete. While the NPP processes billions of transactions annually, a substantial volume of Australian retail account-to-account payments still rely on the BECS system.
Adoption is increasing, led by fintechs and major billers. However, many businesses have been slow to upgrade their legacy billing systems.
A significant challenge in 2025 remains the inconsistency in how different banks have implemented the authorisation process within their apps. This variability can cause frustration for customers trying to set up agreements and is a key focus for industry improvement as the 2030 deadline approaches.
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