Very high demand for domestic air travel in September and October 2025 put additional pressure on seating capacity, and led to higher airfares for travellers in October, the ACCC’s latest Domestic ...
The ACCC is Australia's competition regulator and national consumer law champion. We promote competition and fair trading and regulate national infrastructure to make markets work for everyone.
ACCC Chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb has welcomed the appointment of Dr Ian Oppermann as a Commissioner at the ACCC and the reappointment of Commissioner Anna Brakey for a 5-year term.
The ACCC will not oppose Igneo Infrastructure Partners' proposed acquisition of Benedict Recycling Pty Ltd, following a change to the transaction addressing the ACCC’s preliminary competition concerns ...
Google Asia Pacific has today been ordered by the Federal Court to pay $55 million in penalties for engaging in anti-competitive conduct when it reached understandings with Telstra and Optus about pre ...
On 25 November 2025, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) granted an exemption to Bank of Queensland Limited (BOQ) under section 56GD of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth ...
On 24 November 2025, Qantas Airways Limited (Qantas) and American Airlines Inc (American) (together, the Applicants) applied for revocation and substitution of authorisation AA1000532. Qantas and ...
On 14 November 2025, the ACCC received an application for authorisation from Google LLC (Google) and Epic Games, Inc. (Epic Games). The application for authorisation relates to a settlement reached in ...
Since the ACCC issued this media release on Wednesday 12 November, we have published seven more voluntary recall notices. The recall notices refer to different decorative and play sand products ...
The ACCC has today commenced an inquiry into whether the superfast broadband access service (SBAS) should continue to be regulated. The SBAS is the regulated wholesale service that retailers use to ...
The ACCC has commenced proceedings in the Federal Court against Microsoft Australia and its US-based parent company Microsoft Corporation for allegedly misleading approximately 2.7 million Australian ...
The first step is to contact the business itself to resolve the issue. Often a phone call or visit can fix the issue. If the business doesn’t fix your problem, there are other agencies that can help.