Anti-money laundering compliance is becoming more complex, more technology-driven and more closely linked with sanctions, fraud and financial crime controls.
For firms operating in the UK, EU or US, 2026 is not a year to treat AML as a routine policy refresh. Regulators are raising expectations around beneficial ownership, cryptoasset exposure, sanctions evasion, AI-enabled fraud, customer risk assessment and the quality of ongoing monitoring.
The direction of travel is clear: firms need stronger evidence that their AML frameworks are risk-based, current, tested and capable of responding to emerging financial crime threats.
This guide outlines the key AML compliance themes firms should be reviewing now.
Why AML Compliance Is Changing in 2026
AML regulation is no longer focused only on traditional money laundering indicators. Supervisors increasingly expect firms to identify how financial crime risks overlap across:
- Money laundering
- Terrorist financing
- Sanctions evasion
- Fraud
- Cryptoasset misuse
- Proliferation financing
- Shell company and nominee structures
- AI-enabled deception and synthetic identity fraud
The result is a more integrated compliance environment. Firms are expected to understand not only who their customers are, but how ownership, control, transaction behaviour, geographic exposure and emerging typologies interact.
For compliance teams, this means old controls may no longer be enough. Static policies, periodic reviews and generic risk ratings are being replaced by more dynamic, evidence-led approaches.
Key AML Priorities for UK Firms
UK firms should be preparing for continued regulatory scrutiny from the FCA, HMRC and professional body supervisors, particularly where controls have not kept pace with newer risks.
- AML and Sanctions Controls Are Converging
UK regulators increasingly view money laundering and sanctions evasion as connected risks. A customer, transaction or corporate structure that presents AML concerns may also create sanctions exposure.
Firms should therefore avoid treating sanctions screening as a completely separate process from AML monitoring. Instead, they should assess whether their systems and procedures can identify linked warning signs, such as:
- Complex ownership chains involving high-risk jurisdictions
- Sudden changes in trading routes or counterparties
- Use of intermediaries with unclear commercial purpose
- Attempts to obscure beneficial ownership or control
- Cryptoasset transactions involving higher-risk wallets, exchanges or mixers
A practical step for 2026 is to review whether AML, sanctions and fraud teams share information effectively and whether escalation processes are joined up.
- Cryptoasset Risk Needs Specific Controls
Cryptoassets remain a major regulatory concern because they can be used to move value quickly, pseudonymously and across borders.
Firms do not need to be crypto businesses to have crypto exposure. Traditional financial services firms, law firms, accountants, estate agents, payment providers and wealth managers may all encounter clients whose source of wealth or source of funds involves digital assets.
Policies should clearly explain how the firm identifies and assesses crypto-related risk. This may include:
- Questions about source of wealth linked to crypto gains
- Evidence requirements for cryptoasset proceeds
- Risk indicators involving decentralised finance, mixers or privacy coins
- Enhanced due diligence triggers for crypto-linked clients
- Staff training on common crypto laundering typologies
Where firms cannot properly verify the legitimacy of crypto-derived funds, they should have a clear process for escalation and risk-based decision-making.
- AI-Enabled Financial Crime Is Now a Real Compliance Issue
Artificial intelligence is changing how fraud and money laundering risks appear in practice.
Criminals can use AI tools to create fake documents, deepfake identities, synthetic customer profiles, convincing phishing campaigns and manipulated communications. This creates additional pressure on onboarding, customer due diligence and transaction monitoring controls.
In 2026, firms should consider whether their controls are robust enough to detect:
- Inconsistent identity documents
- Reused or synthetic personal information
- Unusual onboarding behaviour
- Suspiciously polished or scripted customer explanations
- Document metadata or formatting anomalies
- Voice or video verification risks
The key issue is not whether every firm needs advanced AI detection tools. It is whether the firm has assessed how AI-enabled fraud could affect its customer base, products and delivery channels.
EU AML Reform: What Firms Need to Know
The EU is moving towards a more harmonised AML framework, with the creation of the Anti-Money Laundering Authority and the introduction of a new AML regulation and directive.
For firms operating in the EU, this represents a significant shift. The aim is to reduce inconsistent implementation between Member States and create a more centralised supervisory approach for higher-risk firms.
Important themes include:
- More consistent customer due diligence requirements across the EU
- Stronger beneficial ownership transparency
- Increased focus on high-risk cross-border financial institutions
- More detailed technical standards and guidance
- Greater supervisory coordination
- Tougher penalties for serious AML failings
Even UK-based firms may be affected if they operate in the EU, serve EU clients, form part of a wider group with EU entities or rely on EU counterparties.
A sensible approach is to compare UK and EU AML requirements and identify where adopting the higher standard across the group may reduce complexity.
US AML Developments: A More Expansive Enforcement Environment
In the US, AML expectations continue to expand across financial institutions and other gatekeeper sectors.
US authorities have placed growing emphasis on beneficial ownership transparency, sanctions compliance, suspicious activity reporting, illicit finance linked to national security threats and the role of professional intermediaries.
Firms with US exposure should pay particular attention to:
- Corporate transparency and beneficial ownership reporting
- Customer due diligence and ongoing monitoring
- Sanctions screening and export-control-related risk
- High-risk jurisdictions and politically exposed persons
- Suspicious activity reporting quality
- Digital asset and payment-related risks
- Recordkeeping and auditability
The US enforcement environment can be especially challenging for international firms because AML, sanctions and anti-corruption risks often overlap. Firms should ensure they understand where US rules may apply, particularly where transactions involve US persons, US-dollar clearing, US counterparties or US infrastructure.
Beneficial Ownership: Higher Expectations, Better Evidence
Beneficial ownership remains one of the most important areas of AML compliance.
Regulators are increasingly focused on whether firms have verified who ultimately owns or controls a customer, rather than simply collecting information at onboarding.
This is especially important for:
- Complex corporate groups
- Trusts and foundations
- Offshore structures
- Nominee shareholders
- Layered investment vehicles
- Family offices
- Special purpose vehicles
- Cross-border ownership chains
Firms should review whether their beneficial ownership procedures answer the following questions:
- Can we identify the natural persons who ultimately own or control the customer?
- Do we understand the purpose of the structure?
- Have we verified the information using reliable, independent sources where appropriate?
- Do we know when enhanced due diligence is required?
- Are ownership records kept up to date?
- Can we evidence the decisions we made?
A key point for 2026 is that beneficial ownership compliance should not be treated as a box-ticking exercise. Supervisors expect firms to challenge information that appears incomplete, inconsistent or commercially unusual.
Customer Due Diligence and Enhanced Due Diligence
Customer due diligence remains central to any AML framework, but expectations around quality are rising.
Firms should ensure they can explain:
- Who the customer is
- Who owns or controls the customer
- What the customer does
- Why the customer is using the firm’s services
- Where the customer’s funds or wealth come from
- Whether the customer’s activity is consistent with their profile
- Whether any risk factors require enhanced due diligence
Enhanced due diligence should not be limited to politically exposed persons or high-risk countries. It may also be required where there are unusual structures, opaque funding arrangements, adverse media, complex transactions or concerns about sanctions exposure.
The most defensible AML files are those that show a clear risk-based rationale. A reviewer should be able to understand what the firm knew, what it checked, what concerns were considered and why the relationship was accepted or continued.
Transaction Monitoring and Ongoing Review
A common weakness in AML frameworks is the gap between onboarding and ongoing monitoring.
Customers can change. Ownership can change. Risk profiles can change. A relationship that appeared low risk at onboarding may become higher risk because of new activity, new jurisdictions, new counterparties or external events.
Firms should consider whether their monitoring arrangements can identify:
- Activity inconsistent with the customer profile
- Unusual transaction size, frequency or routing
- Rapid movement of funds with no clear economic purpose
- Payments involving high-risk jurisdictions
- Changes in beneficial ownership or control
- New sanctions or adverse media exposure
- Dormant accounts becoming active
- Unexplained third-party payments
For higher-risk customers, periodic reviews may not be enough. Event-driven reviews can be more effective, especially when triggered by transaction alerts, new intelligence, negative news or changes to ownership.
Governance: Senior Management Accountability
AML compliance is not only a compliance department responsibility. Senior management must be able to demonstrate that financial crime risks are understood, resourced and managed.
Good governance should include:
- Clear allocation of AML responsibilities
- Regular management information
- Documented risk appetite
- Independent testing or assurance
- Effective escalation routes
- Board or senior committee oversight
- Evidence of action taken when weaknesses are identified
Regulators are likely to be unimpressed by policies that look adequate on paper but are not embedded in practice. Training, monitoring, audit findings and remediation records all help demonstrate that the framework is operating effectively.
Practical AML Compliance Checklist for 2026
Firms should consider taking the following steps:
- Refresh the business-wide risk assessment
Review whether the firm’s risk assessment properly covers sanctions, cryptoassets, AI-enabled fraud, proliferation financing, high-risk jurisdictions and emerging typologies.
- Review customer risk-rating methodology
Check whether customer risk scores reflect real risk factors, rather than relying on broad categories or outdated assumptions.
- Strengthen beneficial ownership verification
Ensure ownership and control information is verified, documented and updated when circumstances change.
- Update policies and procedures
Policies should reflect current regulatory expectations and should be practical enough for staff to follow.
- Test transaction monitoring rules
Review whether existing rules produce meaningful alerts and whether gaps exist for newer financial crime risks.
- Improve sanctions and AML coordination
Make sure sanctions screening, AML monitoring and fraud controls are not operating in silos.
- Train staff on emerging risks
Training should include practical examples involving cryptoassets, AI-enabled fraud, sanctions evasion and complex ownership structures.
- Check recordkeeping quality
Files should clearly evidence what checks were completed, what concerns were considered and why decisions were made.
- Review high-risk customer files
Conduct targeted reviews of PEPs, high-risk jurisdictions, complex structures, crypto-linked customers and customers with adverse media.
- Document remediation plans
Where weaknesses are found, record the issue, owner, deadline, action taken and final outcome.
Common AML Weaknesses Regulators May Challenge
Many AML failings arise not because a firm has no controls, but because the controls are poorly applied or insufficiently evidenced.
Common issues include:
- Outdated business-wide risk assessments
- Generic customer due diligence notes
- Incomplete beneficial ownership information
- Weak source of funds or source of wealth evidence
- Overreliance on self-certified customer information
- Inadequate review of complex structures
- Poorly calibrated transaction monitoring
- Lack of follow-up on alerts
- Unclear escalation decisions
- Limited senior management oversight
- Policies that do not match actual practice
A strong AML framework should be capable of withstanding external scrutiny. If a file, alert or decision were reviewed months later, the rationale should still be clear.
How Firms Can Prepare Now
AML compliance in 2026 requires more than policy maintenance. Firms need to show that they understand their specific exposure to financial crime and have controls that respond to that risk.
The most important actions are to identify gaps early, prioritise higher-risk areas and create a clear remediation plan.
For many firms, the priority areas will be:
- Updating risk assessments
- Reviewing beneficial ownership controls
- Improving source of funds and source of wealth checks
- Enhancing transaction monitoring
- Integrating AML and sanctions workflows
- Training staff on new typologies
- Strengthening governance and oversight
Firms that act early will be better placed to respond to regulatory change, supervisory reviews and increasingly sophisticated financial crime threats.