AML

AML Risk Assessment

An AML risk assessment is a formal, documented evaluation of the money laundering and terrorist financing risks that a regulated entity faces across its business — including the risks presented by its customer base, products and services, delivery channels, and geographic exposure.

Regulators require entities to conduct a business-wide risk assessment before designing their AML controls, and to update it whenever material changes occur. The risk assessment is the foundation of a risk-based compliance programme: without it, there is no principled basis for the controls applied.

What an AML risk assessment covers

  • identifying which customer segments, types, or profiles present elevated ML/TF risk, such as PEPs, non-resident customers, or those in high-risk sectors
  • assessing which of the entity’s products or services are most susceptible to abuse, such as high-value cash transactions or anonymous payment methods
  • evaluating the ML/TF risk associated with the jurisdictions where customers are based or where transactions are directed, using FATF ratings and OFAC guidance
  • distinguishing between risk before controls are applied (inherent) and risk after controls (residual), to identify gaps that need addressing

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