The Australian Energy Regulator has launched Federal Court proceedings against Origin Energy subsidiaries for allegedly overcharging thousands of Centrepay users, many welfare recipients, by continuing deductions from closed accounts. This scandal, unfolding through 2025, highlights systemic failures in the Centrepay system designed to help vulnerable Australians pay bills from Centrelink payments. Affected customers, often in economic hardship, face potential refunds amid calls for stronger protections.

What is Centrepay and How Does It Work
Centrepay allows approved businesses early access to welfare payments before they hit bank accounts, aiding budgeting for essentials like energy, rent, or groceries. Over six hundred thousand users rely on it, with fifteen thousand businesses participating, including energy retailers. Deductions occur automatically on payment days, simplifying bill management for those without bank accounts or facing financial stress.
The system aims to prevent debt but has drawn criticism for exploitation risks, especially among Indigenous communities and remote users. Services Australia oversees approvals, but compliance audits reveal widespread issues like unauthorized enrollments and excessive charges.
Origin Energy Allegations in Detail
Proceedings filed December 2025 accuse four Origin subsidiaries of breaching National Energy Retail Rules and Law by accepting Centrepay payments from over three thousand four hundred customers with closed, paid-off accounts between December 2019 and March 2025. Origin allegedly retained more than two point five million dollars, including one case of over eleven thousand dollars across nearly two years.
The company knew of system flaws since 2017, halting a fix that could have stopped further deductions. Retailers must notify overcharges over fifty dollars within ten business days and refund promptly, even to ex-customers. Origin failed on both fronts for over seventy-seven thousand instances.
This follows Services Australia referrals in 2024, sparking AER probes into multiple retailers.
Timeline of the 2025 Court Case
Investigations began mid-2024 after Services Australia flagged irregularities. By June 2024, Guardian reports exposed misuse by Origin, AGL, and others, prompting Senate scrutiny. Origin admitted two point five million in overpayments from nearly three thousand ex-customers, initiating refunds.
AER instituted Federal Court action on December nineteenth, 2025, seeking penalties, declarations, customer remediation, compliance programs, and costs. Hearings loom in early 2026, mirroring precedents. Alinta settled in November 2025 with one point zero eight nine million in penalties for similar issues.
Ongoing probes target broader Centrepay flaws, with government reforms announced.
| Key Date | Event |
|---|---|
| Mid-2024 | Services Australia refers retailers to AER |
| June 2024 | Media exposes overpayments |
| December 2024 | AGL fined twenty-five million by Federal Court |
| November 2025 | Alinta pays penalties |
| December 19, 2025 | AER files against Origin |
Appeal on AGL’s fine heard November 2025, decision pending.
Impact on Welfare Recipients
Vulnerable customers, often Centrelink-dependent, lost funds needed for basics, exacerbating hardship. Average overcharges mirror AGL’s near one thousand per person, hitting remote and Indigenous users hardest. One mother paid six thousand five hundred for a one thousand four hundred dollar TV via rent-to-buy.
Financial distress led to debt cycles, with some businesses taking full payments. Psychological harm compounds economic loss, per class action claims. Reforms cap household goods at two hundred fifty dollars and remove non-compliant firms.
Similar Cases Against Other Retailers
AGL faced the heaviest hit: twenty-five million penalty in December 2024 for overcharging four hundred eighty-three Centrepay users over sixteen thousand breaches from 2017-2021. Ergon and others implicated in Senate hearings.
Alinta’s November 2025 infringement notices covered mishandled refunds post-2023 self-reports. Synergy self-reported non-Centrepay overcharges in June 2025. These set precedents for Origin’s case.
| Retailer | Penalty/Status | Customers Affected | Amount Retained |
|---|---|---|---|
| AGL | Twenty-five million (2024) | Four hundred eighty-three | Seven hundred thousand |
| Alinta | One point zero eight nine million (2025) | Undisclosed | Refunds issued |
| Origin | Court pending (2025) | Three thousand four hundred | Two point five million |
Pattern shows systemic retailer non-compliance.
Rights and Recourse for Affected Recipients
Check Centrepay statements via myGov for unauthorized deductions. Contact Services Australia at thirteen twenty three oh four to dispute, cancel, or review schedules. Energy retailers must refund overcharges proactively; demand notifications and repayments.
Lodge complaints with AER online or energy ombudsman if unresolved. Class actions, like GMP Law’s against the Commonwealth for oversight failures, seek compensation for negligence and distress. Free legal aid via community centers aids vulnerable claimants.
Reforms enhance consent rules and monitoring. Switch providers or payments to avoid risks.
| Step | Action | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| Verify Deductions | Log into myGov | Services Australia |
| Dispute Payment | Request cancellation | Thirteen twenty three oh four |
| Seek Refund | Contact Retailer | AER Complaint Form |
| Legal Help | Join Class Action | GMP Law or Legal Aid |
Document all interactions.
Government and Regulatory Response
Bill Shorten announced major Centrepay overhaul in 2024 to curb predatory behavior, including business caps and compliance audits showing forty-two percent non-compliance. AER Chair Clare Savage emphasized protections for vulnerable users.
Services Australia refunds overpayments and educates users. Senate probes revealed misrepresented businesses; new limits apply. Broader reviews target exploitation in remote areas.
Statistics on Centrepay Usage and Issues
Six hundred thousand users allocate portions of fortnightly payments, with energy a top category. Audits found forty-two percent of businesses non-compliant in 2022-2023. Overpayments total millions across cases: AGL seven hundred thousand, Origin two point five million.
Remote Indigenous communities face highest risks, with reports of full payment seizures. Post-reform, removals and caps aim to halve issues.
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Users | Six hundred thousand |
| Businesses | Fifteen thousand |
| Non-Compliance Rate | Forty-two percent |
| Total Overpayments (Known) | Over three million |
Preventing Future Overcharges
Users should review schedules quarterly, limit deductions, and confirm business approvals. Opt for direct debit or Centrelink advances for control. Retailers face stricter AER monitoring post-cases.
Government pushes digital literacy programs. AER seeks industry-wide compliance programs.
What to Expect from the Origin Case Outcome
Penalties could match AGL’s scale, given breaches and duration. Court may order full two point five million remediation plus interest. Compliance overhaul required, setting benchmarks.
Welfare recipients gain leverage for refunds regardless. Reforms reshape Centrepay safer long-term.

Lance Evans is a contributor at CSKHYBER.co.nz covering New Zealand and Australia news, with a focus on trending updates and public-interest stories.