The FATF is conducting its 5th Round Mutual Evaluation of the UAE in June 2026. The assessment focuses on anti-money laundering effectiveness, beneficial ownership transparency, enforcement outcomes, virtual assets and international cooperation. Businesses, foundations, SPVs and family offices should ensure ownership records, AML documentation and corporate substance evidence are accurate and up to date.


Key Takeaways

✔ FATF assessors are currently conducting onsite inspections in the UAE.

✔ The UAE is being evaluated under a significantly stricter methodology than previous rounds.

✔ Beneficial ownership transparency is one of the primary focus areas.

✔ Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 introduced major AML reforms.

✔ Foundations, SPVs and complex holding structures face increased scrutiny.

✔ Family offices and international investors should review ownership records immediately.

✔ The cost of correcting deficiencies after regulatory findings is substantially higher than conducting a proactive review.


Why This FATF Review Is Different

When the UAE was removed from the FATF grey list in February 2024, many business owners assumed the most intensive phase of AML scrutiny was over.

In reality, the opposite may be true.

Grey-list removal was never the final destination. It was the beginning of a new stage.

The FATF's 5th Round Mutual Evaluation, currently underway in June 2026, represents the first comprehensive assessment of the UAE since its removal from enhanced monitoring.

This assessment is designed to answer a different question:

Has the UAE merely implemented AML rules, or are those rules producing measurable results?

That distinction is critical.

The FATF is no longer primarily interested in legislation alone. It now focuses heavily on real-world effectiveness.


What Is FATF Evaluating?

The Financial Action Task Force evaluates countries against 11 Immediate Outcomes.

These outcomes measure whether anti-money laundering systems work in practice rather than simply existing on paper.

Areas Under Review

Assessment AreaFATF Focus
Beneficial OwnershipTransparency and accuracy
Financial IntelligenceUse of intelligence in investigations
EnforcementReal enforcement outcomes
International CooperationInformation sharing effectiveness
Virtual AssetsCryptocurrency supervision
Corporate StructuresOwnership transparency
Proliferation FinancingPrevention and enforcement
Financial InstitutionsAML implementation

For UAE companies, beneficial ownership transparency is likely to be one of the most relevant areas.


Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025: A Major AML Development

One of the most significant developments ahead of the FATF review was the introduction of Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025.

The law replaced Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2018 and introduced several important changes.

Key Changes

  • Enhanced AML obligations
  • Increased reporting requirements
  • Stronger enforcement powers
  • Expanded beneficial ownership oversight
  • New proliferation financing provisions
  • Higher compliance expectations

The introduction of proliferation financing as a standalone offence demonstrates the UAE's commitment to aligning with evolving FATF standards.


Why Beneficial Ownership Has Become the Central Issue

For many structures, beneficial ownership is no longer a routine compliance exercise.

It is becoming a primary regulatory focus.

The FATF wants to determine whether authorities can identify the natural persons who ultimately own or control corporate entities.

This becomes more challenging when structures include:

  • Multiple holding companies
  • Foundations
  • Trust-like arrangements
  • SPVs
  • Cross-border ownership layers
  • Nominee relationships
  • Family office structures

The more complex the ownership chain becomes, the greater the importance of maintaining accurate documentation.


Which UAE Structures Face the Highest Scrutiny?

Not all structures attract the same level of regulatory attention.

Higher-Risk Structures

Structure TypeRisk Level
Multi-layered holding structuresHigh
Family office platformsHigh
FoundationsHigh
SPVs with foreign ownershipHigh
Virtual asset businessesHigh
International investment structuresHigh
Single operating company structuresModerate

Complex structures connected to jurisdictions traditionally viewed as higher risk often receive additional attention during FATF assessments.

This is particularly relevant for international investors using UAE vehicles for asset protection, succession planning and cross-border investment management.


Expert Commentary

From an advisory perspective, the key issue is not whether a structure is legal.

Most structures established in the UAE are perfectly legitimate.

The real question is whether regulators can clearly understand:

  • Who owns the structure
  • Who controls the structure
  • Why the structure exists
  • Whether its activities align with its stated purpose

If documentation cannot answer these questions quickly and consistently, compliance risk increases significantly.


Common Beneficial Ownership Mistakes

During compliance reviews, several recurring issues appear.

Most Frequent Problems

Outdated Ownership Records

Shareholders change, but registers are not updated promptly.

Inconsistent Documentation

Information differs across:

  • Banks
  • Corporate service providers
  • Registries
  • Internal records

Missing Supporting Evidence

Ownership may be declared but insufficiently documented.

Poor Documentation of Control

Control rights may exist through agreements that are not properly recorded.

Unclear Source of Wealth Information

This remains a common issue for family office and investment structures.


Practical Scenario

Consider a UAE SPV established in 2019.

Ownership sits through multiple international holding companies.

The structure was originally established for succession planning and asset protection.

Since formation:

  • Ownership changed twice.
  • Additional subsidiaries were added.
  • Banking relationships expanded.
  • Corporate tax became effective.

If beneficial ownership records were never fully updated, the structure may now contain inconsistencies across multiple institutions.

Those inconsistencies often become visible during compliance reviews.


Compliance Checklist for UAE Structures

Before the FATF review results are published, businesses should consider reviewing:

Corporate Documentation

✔ Share registers

✔ UBO registers

✔ Corporate charts

✔ Foundation records

✔ SPV records

AML Documentation

✔ KYC files

✔ Source of wealth documentation

✔ Source of funds evidence

✔ Risk assessments

✔ Internal compliance policies

Operational Evidence

✔ Office arrangements

✔ Employee records

✔ Board meeting documentation

✔ Service agreements

✔ Banking records


Review Process Timeline

Step 1

Structure Mapping

Step 2

Beneficial Ownership Verification

Step 3

Documentation Review

Step 4

AML Compliance Assessment

Step 5

Gap Analysis

Step 6

Remediation

Step 7

Ongoing Monitoring


Pros and Cons of Conducting a Review Now

ProsCons
Identify issues before regulatorsRequires time investment
Reduce compliance riskProfessional review costs
Improve banking relationshipsInternal resource allocation
Strengthen governanceDocumentation gathering effort
Support future transactionsAdministrative work

For most sophisticated structures, the advantages substantially outweigh the costs.


Statistics Highlighting the Trend

IndicatorResult
FATF Grey List ExitFebruary 2024
Current Evaluation Round5th Round
New AML LawFederal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025
Immediate Outcomes Reviewed11
FATF Onsite AssessmentJune 2026

Sources


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the FATF Mutual Evaluation?

A comprehensive review conducted by the Financial Action Task Force to assess the effectiveness of a country's anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing framework.

Does FATF evaluate individual companies?

No. FATF evaluates countries. However, assessors review how effectively authorities supervise and enforce compliance across businesses and corporate structures.

Which UAE entities face the highest compliance scrutiny?

Foundations, SPVs, family office structures, virtual asset businesses and complex cross-border ownership arrangements generally attract greater attention.

Is beneficial ownership disclosure mandatory in the UAE?

Yes. UAE entities must maintain accurate beneficial ownership information and comply with applicable UBO regulations.

Should existing UAE structures be reviewed?

For many structures established before recent AML, tax and corporate governance reforms, a professional review is advisable.


The FATF's 5th Round Mutual Evaluation is not simply another regulatory event.

It represents a comprehensive assessment of how effectively the UAE's AML framework functions in practice.

For foundations, SPVs, family offices and international holding structures, the review serves as a reminder that beneficial ownership transparency, documentation quality and governance standards are no longer peripheral compliance matters.

They are becoming central components of regulatory risk management.

Affinitas has been advising international investors, family offices, entrepreneurs and HNWIs on UAE structuring, governance and compliance matters since 2010 and has operated in DMCC since 2014.

For structures that have not undergone a compliance review within the last 12 months, now is an appropriate time to reassess documentation, ownership records and governance frameworks before scrutiny arrives rather than after.

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