15 June 2026
Effective July 10, 2027, the EU Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (EU AML Regulation) will apply directly in all member states. As the centerpiece of the EU AML package, it is intended to create a truly unified single rulebook for the entire European single market.
The focus in the future will be on the actual resilience and effectiveness of each anti-money laundering system. This marks a fundamental paradigm shift: whereas formal documentation requirements were previously the main focus, the effective functionality of the compliance system is now taking center stage.
The regulation not only tightens the requirements for KYC processes, the identification of ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs), and PEP screening, but also makes anti-money laundering primarily data-driven. In the future, companies will have no choice but to collect their data in a structured manner, update it continuously, and analyze it intelligently. This is all the more true in light of the new EU list system for high-risk countries and the closer integration with sanctions law. Data protection and anti-money laundering are thus moving significantly closer together and can no longer be viewed in isolation from one another.
Another major change is the new cash limit: cash payments exceeding 10,000 euros in a business context will be prohibited EU-wide for all companies in the future. At the same time, Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) and Implementing Technical Standards (ITS) under the new European supervisory architecture are specifying the operational requirements. They define in detail which measures must be implemented and how data flows, reports, and controls are to be structured.
What does this mean specifically for companies? A gap analysis should be conducted early on to identify discrepancies between existing anti-money laundering processes, data structures, and IT systems on the one hand, and future regulatory requirements on the other. Furthermore, KYC, UBO identification, PEP screening, and sanctions checks must be integrated into a unified, audit-proof compliance system. This must be supported by clearly defined roles and documented workflows. Additionally, a new understanding is needed within the company itself: Anti-money laundering must no longer be viewed as a mere formality, but rather as an early warning and risk management system that delivers real value to the business. Companies that initiate this transformation early on do more than just reduce regulatory risks. They also create more efficient processes, strengthen the trust of business partners, and secure a tangible competitive advantage.
This text was translated using AI.