Call for Urgent Action on CSLR

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The government is being asked to make urgent and significant changes to the CSLR to ensure fairness and sustainability, following the release of CSLR’s update for the 2025/26 financial year.

The FAAA’s CEO Sarah Abood says that in the face of the further deterioration in the long-term outlook for the CSLR, it is increasingly critical that Government steps in to fix the problem.

“We are keen to see the release of the Treasury report into the CSLR and the Government’s response,” she said. “The problems will rapidly get substantially worse if urgent action is not taken, putting the ongoing existence of the scheme at risk.”

Urgent action is needed to fix the CSLR funding mechanism, otherwise this will decimate the advice profession…

She said the reduction of $2.8m in the total estimated CSLR cost for the financial advice sector for 2025/26 to $67.3m, is because of a delay in the processing of known complaints, not a reduction in expected claims.

“Effectively this will push a significant additional cost into the 2026/27 year,” she said.

“Some of the key developments since the January 2025 initial estimate are an increase in complaints.”

She said many of the 350 UGC complaints will not be processed until 2026/27 – and pointed to the increasing prominence of Brite Advisors, where the revised estimate includes only 10 claims out of the 618 complaints that AFCA has already received.

Sarah Abood.
Sarah Abood.

In addition, she said, these numbers do not include any allowance for the impact of either Shield or First Guardian, although numerous announcements by ASIC suggest these are very substantial matters where financial advice complaints are likely.

“This paints a picture of multiple years of claims that are substantially above the sector cap,” said Abood.

“The Government’s plans in relation to the allocation of costs above the $20m sector cap are unknown,” she said. “But clearly the financial advice profession should not and cannot cover this.

“Urgent action is needed to fix the CSLR funding mechanism, otherwise this will decimate the advice profession, further drive up the cost of advice and put professional financial advice completely out of reach for average Australians.”