What Is Anti-Money Laundering (AML)?
Anti-money laundering (AML) refers to the laws, regulations, and procedures designed to prevent criminals from disguising illegally obtained funds as legitimate income. Money laundering involves three stages: placement (introducing criminal proceeds into the financial system), layering (moving funds through multiple transactions to obscure the trail), and integration (using the cleaned funds in the legitimate economy).
The UK's AML framework is primarily governed by the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017 (MLR 2017), as amended. The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (POCA) and the Terrorism Act 2000 provide the criminal law underpinning. Together, these laws apply to a wide range of businesses beyond traditional banks and financial institutions.
Who Must Comply with AML Regulations?
AML obligations apply to all businesses in regulated sectors — collectively known as 'obliged entities.' These include banks, building societies, investment firms, insurance companies, estate agents, letting agents (since 2020), high-value dealers (accepting cash payments over €10,000), money service businesses, trust and company service providers, accountants, tax advisors, legal professionals, and art market participants.
Each regulated sector has a supervisory authority. The FCA supervises banks and investment firms. HMRC supervises estate agents, money service businesses, and trust/company service providers — over 30,000 businesses in total. Professional bodies like the Solicitors Regulation Authority and ICAEW supervise their own members.
Key AML Obligations
Regulated businesses must conduct customer due diligence (CDD) before establishing a business relationship. This means verifying the customer's identity, understanding the purpose of the relationship, and identifying the beneficial owner. Three levels of due diligence apply: simplified (low-risk), standard, and enhanced (high-risk customers, PEPs, high-risk countries).
Ongoing monitoring is mandatory — businesses must scrutinise transactions throughout the relationship and keep CDD records up to date. Suspicious activity must be reported to the National Crime Agency (NCA) via a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR). The UK receives over 900,000 SARs per year, making it one of the largest reporting regimes globally.
Penalties for Non-Compliance
Penalties for AML breaches are severe. Money laundering itself carries up to 14 years' imprisonment. Failure to report suspicious activity (known as 'failure to disclose') carries up to 5 years. Tipping off a suspect that a report has been made also carries up to 5 years. HMRC and other supervisors can impose unlimited fines for regulatory breaches.
In 2023-2024 alone, the FCA issued over £176 million in AML-related fines. NatWest was fined £264.8 million in 2021 for failures in monitoring suspicious transactions. These cases demonstrate that regulators are willing to take action against even the largest institutions.
How UVAGATRON Supports AML Compliance
UVAGATRON integrates HMRC's AML Supervised Business Register covering 26,500+ matched companies, alongside UK sanctions data (FCDO), ICIJ offshore records (Panama/Paradise/Pandora Papers), and OpenSanctions data to provide comprehensive financial crime risk assessment. Director network analysis identifies individuals connected to sanctioned entities, disqualified directors, or companies involved in insolvency proceedings.