Victoria Cross recipient Ben Roberts-Smith will have to come up with almost $1 million to pursue his defamation appeal against news publications over reports he engaged in war crimes in Afghanistan.
The Federal Court ruled in June that articles published by Nine newspapers and The Canberra Times alleging Mr Roberts-Smith's involvement in murders of four unarmed prisoners while deployed in Afghanistan were substantially true.
He has not been criminally charged and has since appealed the decision to the full court.
On Thursday and Friday, Justice Nye Perram made orders after agreement between Mr Roberts-Smith and the media companies that the decorated soldier should pay $910,000.
The money will be paid in three instalments and will act as security for the media companies, to be handed over if Mr Roberts-Smith loses the appeal.
It will sit in an interest-bearing account selected by the court until the legal challenge is either accepted or dismissed after a 10-day appeal hearing scheduled for February.
The money comes on top of an estimated $25 million legal bill for Mr Roberts-Smith and the news firms during a bitterly-fought defamation case that involved over 100 days of hearings.
The newspapers are currently pursuing their costs against the former soldier as well as the Seven Network and billionaire Kerry Stokes' private firm Australian Capital Equity, which financially backed the war veteran in his lawsuit.
The Office of the Special Investigator and Australian Federal Police are jointly investigating 33 alleged offences by defence force members in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2016.
The OSI was established after an inquiry by the Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force into soldiers' conduct in Afghanistan.
Lifeline 13 11 14
Open Arms 1800 011 046