Why Banking Complaints Are Up 34% This Year (Pipeline Test)
Pipeline test — Generic consumer article. Hellopeter saw a 34% YoY increase in banking complaints. Here is what's driving it.
The headline number
South African consumers filed 34% more banking complaints on Hellopeter in the 12 months to March 2026 compared to the prior year. That's the steepest year-on-year rise in the past five years and it cuts across every major bank in the country.
The increase isn't evenly distributed. Three categories drove most of it: digital banking failures, fraud and account compromise, and fee disputes.
Digital banking failures (31% of complaints)
App outages, failed payments, and slow mobile money transfers made up the largest single complaint category. The mid-year banking app rollouts in March and August 2025 coincided with significant complaint spikes — each release triggered a multi-week uptick in "app crashed during payment" and "lost transaction" reports.
The bank with the highest digital-failure complaint rate added 80,000 new digital-banking customers in the same year. Capacity didn't keep pace with growth.
Fraud and account compromise (28%)
Fraud-related complaints almost doubled YoY. Most originated from SIM-swap attacks and phishing rather than card skimming. Banks responded with new in-app PIN-confirmation flows but consumer experience reports remain split — half say the new flows feel safer, half say they're slower without solving the root cause.
The biggest gap in 2026 banking complaints is fraud-resolution timelines. The average time-to-refund for compromised accounts is 47 days. The best-performing bank does it in 12 days. The worst takes 96.
Fee disputes (19%)
Fee complaints rose alongside fee changes. Three of the big five banks restructured their fee tables in late 2025, and many of those changes weren't well communicated to existing customers. Surprise debits drove a wave of complaints in the months that followed.
What hasn't changed
Branch service complaints stayed flat year-on-year and now make up only 4% of total complaints, down from 11% three years ago. The shift is real: banking-customer pain has moved decisively into digital channels.




