Real Finance is to pay out $1.36 million to 515 customers it overcharged after reaching a settlement agreement with the Commerce Commission.
The commission opened an investigation into the Wellington-based consumer lender in 2018 after receiving a request from the District Court to intervene in an application by Real Finance for a summary judgment against a borrower.
The commission then filed civil proceedings against Real Finance in 2019 alleging it had charged borrowers unreasonable fees.
In a statement today the commission said Real Finance had admitted to entering into consumer credit contracts with borrowers between April 2013 and March 2020 that breached the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act (CCCFA) because the fees charged exceeded reasonable costs incurred by the company.
Commission chairwoman Anna Rawlings said when people borrowed money to buy goods on credit, the credit and default fees they were charged were not intended to be used to cover general business expenses or to make a profit.