Telstra to charge for bill payments

 

Introduces $2.20 'administration fee' for bricks and mortar payments.

Telstra will charge customers a $2.20 administration fee every time a bill is paid by mail or in person at a Telstra shop or Australia Post.

And the carrier said it will increase its credit card processing fee to 1 percent of the value of transactions for MasterCard, VISA and American Express payments and 2 percent for Diners Club payments, plus GST.

The only means by which customers will not incur a when they pay their bill is through direct debit and BPAY.

"All customers can pay bills for free [iTnews emphasis] from a savings or cheque account via one of Telstra's three direct debit options or via BPAY," the carrier said.

The changes come into effect on September 14.

Telstra aims to convince more customers to sign up to bill payment options that do not require the carrier to hire customer service staff.

"Every year we spend hundreds of millions of dollars on billing, which includes processing bill payments, paying third-party billing service providers, answering customers' questions about their bills and operating systems to support billing," said Telstra consumer executive director Jenny Young.

Customers that sign up to direct debit before September 14 when buying a Telstra fixed phone, mobile handset, BigPond wireless modem or home network gateway modem from a Telstra shop or reseller will get a $50 credit, provided they stay with direct debit for a year.

Telstra said its pensioner discount and disability program customers will be exemptied from the fees.

Customers with pensioner cards, Australian Government health-care cards or those paying at Centrelink or the Telstra bill assistance program are also exempt.


Telstra to charge for bill payments
"The great monopolist strikes again. It's a well worn path - they impose unfair fees that will reap them a fortune out of our pockets, then they throw a bone to the poor and disabled sectors by ..."
By anonymous
 
 
 
Comments: 4
DanielBrown
Jul 21, 2009 3:14 PM
Like the other companies which do this, I think its shocking and anti-competitive. Instead of giving choices, they are reducing choices or penalising you for not going along with their choice.

I can understand why, but not all people have the internet, some 30% of Australians don’t.

Another way for big business to profit.

Companies like Telstra are the reason why we are in the GFC and yet they tell us how good they are. People need to get rid of the old companies who caused this problem and start investing in the new ones who haven’t broken consumer confidence!

Not only are they charging you to pay your bill in person, but they are also charging you the b-pay and/or credit card fees. Either way you’re paying more than you should!
Yertle
Jul 21, 2009 3:58 PM
They'll charge you to pay on credit but you can't put it on credit through Bpay which i can do with other bpay billers. They really do just want to force you to do it their way.

They really don't seem to care about the customers and that's why I really don't like Telsra and as soon as my contract is up, i'm out of there.
Reginald
Jul 21, 2009 4:44 PM
This seems fair. Can I invoice Telstra for the time it takes to open and read their bill as well as any time I spend making my funds available or opening my wallet- I mean I wouldn't incur these time costs if they weren't billing me in the first place..
anonymous
Jul 21, 2009 6:04 PM

The great monopolist strikes again. It's a well worn path - they impose unfair fees that will reap them a fortune out of our pockets, then they throw a bone to the poor and disabled sectors by saying they don't have to pay the extra.

Most consumer organisations are only interested in these sectors, so they support the move since they can then claim they have obtained a discount for "their people".

And most users (residential and all small businesses) get screwed blind because there is nobody representing their interests.
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