Whitehorse City Council faced $11.8 million in rate arrears, an arrears trap that forced struggling households to clear last year's debt before paying this year's rates, and an infringement process where a single referral fee wiped out 88% of a $99 parking fine.
By partnering with Payble, Whitehorse introduced automated, flexible payment options for both rates and infringements on one platform. In the first year the council recovered $5.7 million in arrears, hit a 95.63% collection rate, and cut external infringement referrals by 63% in three months.
This case study breaks down how a unified, community-first approach to revenue collection delivered better cash flow for the council and real relief for ratepayers at the same time.
How Whitehorse fixed the arrears trap by combining past debt with current rates into one achievable schedule, how unifying rates and infringements on a single platform cut collection costs, and why early intervention and flexible payment options lift both collection rates and community satisfaction.
$5.7 million in rate arrears recovered in one year
By combining arrears with current-year rates into one manageable payment schedule, Whitehorse reduced total arrears from $11.8 million to around $6 million and achieved a 95.63% collection rate, well above the 85-90% industry average.
63% fewer external infringement referrals in three months
Payment arrangement referrals to Fines Victoria dropped from 111 in April to 41 by July. With fewer referrals incurring the $87.60 collection fee, the council saved more than $6,000 every month in direct costs.
4.63/5 ratepayer satisfaction and 10,000+ active accounts
Satisfaction soared to 4.63 out of 5 against a local government average of 3.1. Over 10,000 accounts now use flexible plans, and 86% of missed payments resolve without any staff intervention.

With over 1% in cash rate rises forecast over the next 4–5 months, local governments face a wave of inflation driven by soaring oil prices, electricity costs up 32.2%, and housing pressures. This webinar explains why it's happening, and what councils need to do now to protect their communities and financial sustainability.

Legacy billing costs councils more than they realise. Bega Valley Shire Council faced manual workflows, limited design control, and postage bills up to $10,000 per run.
Payble Digital Notices changes that, streamlining enrolment, automating reminders, and delivering a seamless, passwordless payment experience.

Leaders from City of Wanneroo and Matamata‑Piako District Council (NZ) join Dailius Wilson to share real stories, surprising stats, and practical wins. From saving 12,000+ staff hours to helping residents avoid penalties, you’ll see how flexible payments, digital notices, and smarter workflows are transforming local government.
Privacy & Terms apply.