Borrow
Lender remediates 18,000 mortgage customers
A lender has commenced reimbursing thousands of home loan customers after failing to properly link their mortgages to an offset facility.
Lender remediates 18,000 mortgage customers
A lender has commenced reimbursing thousands of home loan customers after failing to properly link their mortgages to an offset facility.
Building society Newcastle Permanent has confirmed that it is remediating approximately 18,000 customers a total of $4.2 million after overcharging interest on their home loans.
According to the lender, after undertaking a periodic review of its processes, it identified that an “error” had resulted in customers’ offset transaction accounts “not properly linked” to their home loans.
Newcastle Permanent self-reported the issue to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC).
In a statement to Mortgage Business, Newcastle Permanent apologised to customers for the error, adding that it would continue working to determine if other mortgage holders are eligible for remediation.

“We sincerely apologise to our affected customers, and are committed to reimbursing all those impacted, and have taken steps to ensure this issue does not reoccur,” the lender stated.
“Owning our mistakes is a core organisational value as we continue to honour our customers’ trust through transparency and putting our customers first in all that we do.”
“Given the complexity of the individual amounts to be calculated on a per customer basis over time, we are taking a staged approach, and have commenced connecting with affected customers, and are making payments to around 18,000 customers throughout 2020,” the spokesperson said.
The lender also noted that it has also established a dedicated customer response team to assist affected customers.
Newcastle Permanent’s remediation action was confirmed amid reports that fellow building society Greater Bank has also remediated 31 customers a total of approximately $56,000 for similar breaches.
However, in an interview with the local media, Greater Bank CEO Scott Morgan said that a review of its processes had not found any systemic issues.
“We’ve got no appetite to hide problems. We just get on and fix them when customers raise problems with us,” Mr Morgan told the media.
“When issues are raised, we try to make sure that it’s not a systemic issue. We made sure there were no systemic issues relating to mortgage offset accounts, picked up a human-related error and made adjustments.”
Last year, NAB also confirmed that it had identified further instances in which it had overcharged home loan customers after failing to properly link offset accounts to broker-originated home loans from between April 2010 and August 2017.
NAB identified an additional 4,930 customers requiring remediation, taking the total to 6,522, with refunds payable totalling over $8 million.
Loans
Australia’s credit pivot: Mortgage enquiries hit a three‑year peak as households lean on plastic — what lenders and fintechs must do next
Australian home loan interest has rebounded even as households lean harder on cards and personal loans — a classic late‑cycle signal that demands sharper risk, pricing and AI executionRead more
Loans
Trust is the new yield: Why brokers win when credibility compounds
In a market where products look interchangeable, credibility has become the most defensible asset in mortgage broking. With broker channel share hitting record highs and AI reshaping client ...Read more
Loans
Mortgage Relief Window: How Australia’s Lenders Are Rewiring Risk and Growth at a Three‑Year Lull
Australia’s mortgage stress has eased to its lowest level since early 2023, creating a rare—likely brief—window for lenders, brokers and fintechs to reset risk and rebuild growth. This case study ...Read more
Loans
Why ANZ’s tougher stance on company-borrowed home loans matters: A case study in risk recalibration, competition, and what CFOs should do next
ANZ has tightened mortgage credit parameters for loans where a company or trust is the borrower—an apparently narrow policy tweak with wide operational consequences. It signals a broader recalibration ...Read more
Loans
Mortgage 2026: Australia’s share‑of‑wallet war will be won on switching, data rights and AI discipline
The defining feature of Australia’s 2026 mortgage market won’t be house prices; it will be switching velocity. With competition reforms sharpening the Consumer Data Right, lenders and brokers that ...Read more
Loans
Mortgage remorse reshapes the game: Australia's lending squeeze set to redefine banking and household demand
A growing cohort of Australians is rethinking recent home loan decisions as higher repayments collide with household budgets. This isn’t just consumer angst; it’s an economy-wide red flag for lenders, ...Read more
Loans
Aussie mortgage game-changer: Brokers dominate while AI sharpens the edge
Mortgage brokers now originate roughly three in four new Australian home loans, a structural shift that rewires bank economics, product strategy and customer acquisition. MFAA data shows broker market ...Read more
Loans
Fixing the future: How brokers and lenders can turn rate-hike anxiety into strategic advantage
Australian borrowers are leaning into short-term fixed loans as rate uncertainty lingers, shifting risk from households to lenders and their funding partners. That creates a narrow window for broker ...Read more
Loans
Australia’s credit pivot: Mortgage enquiries hit a three‑year peak as households lean on plastic — what lenders and fintechs must do next
Australian home loan interest has rebounded even as households lean harder on cards and personal loans — a classic late‑cycle signal that demands sharper risk, pricing and AI executionRead more
Loans
Trust is the new yield: Why brokers win when credibility compounds
In a market where products look interchangeable, credibility has become the most defensible asset in mortgage broking. With broker channel share hitting record highs and AI reshaping client ...Read more
Loans
Mortgage Relief Window: How Australia’s Lenders Are Rewiring Risk and Growth at a Three‑Year Lull
Australia’s mortgage stress has eased to its lowest level since early 2023, creating a rare—likely brief—window for lenders, brokers and fintechs to reset risk and rebuild growth. This case study ...Read more
Loans
Why ANZ’s tougher stance on company-borrowed home loans matters: A case study in risk recalibration, competition, and what CFOs should do next
ANZ has tightened mortgage credit parameters for loans where a company or trust is the borrower—an apparently narrow policy tweak with wide operational consequences. It signals a broader recalibration ...Read more
Loans
Mortgage 2026: Australia’s share‑of‑wallet war will be won on switching, data rights and AI discipline
The defining feature of Australia’s 2026 mortgage market won’t be house prices; it will be switching velocity. With competition reforms sharpening the Consumer Data Right, lenders and brokers that ...Read more
Loans
Mortgage remorse reshapes the game: Australia's lending squeeze set to redefine banking and household demand
A growing cohort of Australians is rethinking recent home loan decisions as higher repayments collide with household budgets. This isn’t just consumer angst; it’s an economy-wide red flag for lenders, ...Read more
Loans
Aussie mortgage game-changer: Brokers dominate while AI sharpens the edge
Mortgage brokers now originate roughly three in four new Australian home loans, a structural shift that rewires bank economics, product strategy and customer acquisition. MFAA data shows broker market ...Read more
Loans
Fixing the future: How brokers and lenders can turn rate-hike anxiety into strategic advantage
Australian borrowers are leaning into short-term fixed loans as rate uncertainty lingers, shifting risk from households to lenders and their funding partners. That creates a narrow window for broker ...Read more
