AML Inspection UAE 2026: How to Prepare Your Business Before the Regulator Arrives

AML inspection UAE 2026

1,063

AML violations found in 2025 alone

AED 42M+

In fines issued by Ministry of Economy in 2025

300%

Increase in DNFBP inspection rates since 2021

AED 5M

Maximum fine per AML violation

AED 42 million in fines. 1,063 violations. All in just six months. Here is everything UAE businesses need to know about surviving and passing an AML inspection in 2026.

Table of Contents

Why AML Inspection UAE 2026 Is a Different Beast Entirely

If you are a UAE business owner and have not yet considered AML inspection readiness, the numbers above should change that immediately.

In the first half of 2025 alone, the Ministry of Economy uncovered 1,063 AML compliance violations and imposed fines exceeding AED 42 million on non-compliant Designated Non-Financial Businesses and Professions (DNFBPs). Precious metals traders accounted for 473 violations and AED 20 million in fines. Real estate brokerages were responsible for 495 violations. These are not large international banks. These are businesses exactly like yours.

And the pace is accelerating. The Ministry of Economy has increased DNFBP inspection rates by over 300% since 2021. In March 2026, the Ministries of Economy and Justice jointly launched the first dedicated AML forum of 2026, signaling that coordinated, multi-authority enforcement is now fully underway. With the FATF Fifth Round Mutual Evaluation of the UAE anticipated in mid-2026, regulators are under intense pressure to demonstrate that anti money laundering inspection UAE enforcement is not just a paper exercise.

Critical Update June 2026: UAE regulators are now conducting both unannounced on-site inspections and desk-based reviews simultaneously across all DNFBP categories. The window between receiving an inspection notice and the visit itself can be as short as 48 hours. If your AML framework is not already inspection-ready, you do not have enough time to fix it.

This guide covers everything UAE businesses need to know about the AML inspection in 2026: what inspectors look for, the most common violations, the documents you need ready, and exactly how to prepare before the Ministry of Economy arrives at your door.

What Is an AML Inspection and Who Conducts It in the UAE?

An AML inspection in UAE is a formal regulatory review conducted by a supervisory authority to assess whether your business is meeting its anti money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) obligations under Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 and Cabinet Resolution 134 of 2025.

Multiple regulatory authorities conduct AML inspections in UAE, depending on your business type:

Regulatory Authority

Businesses Supervised

Ministry of Economy (MoET)

All mainland DNFBPs, real estate agents, gold traders, auditors, legal consultants, and corporate service providers

Central Bank UAE (CBUAE)

Banks, exchange houses, insurance companies, payment service providers, fintech businesses

DFSA

Financial institutions and DNFBPs operating within the DIFC free zone

FSRA (ADGM)

Financial institutions and businesses operating within the Abu Dhabi Global Market

Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU)

All regulated entities monitor goAML portal filings, STR quality, and reporting compliance

It is important to note that free zone companies are not exempt from AML inspection obligations in the UAE. Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 applies to all businesses operating in the UAE, including those in DIFC, ADGM, JAFZA, DMCC, and Meydan. The only difference is which authority conducts the inspection.

Two Types of AML Inspection in UAE: What to Expect

UAE supervisory authorities now conduct AML compliance inspections through two distinct channels, often simultaneously. Understanding the difference is critical for inspection readiness.

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On-Site AML Inspection UAE

Inspectors physically visit your business premises. They review documents in real time, interview staff, observe your operational processes, test your transaction-monitoring system, and assess whether your stated policies align with your actual business practices. Notice can be as short as 24–48 hours. In some cases, inspections are completely unannounced.

Off-Site Desk-Based AML Review UAE

The Ministry of Economy or the relevant authority sends a formal request for documents and information. You are typically given 5 to 15 working days to submit. Responses are assessed against a structured scoring matrix, benchmarked against peer firms in your sector, and retained as part of your permanent supervisory risk profile.

A third mechanism, the AML Annual Assessment Survey UAE, is a mandatory supervisory questionnaire issued to all DNFBPs. Many businesses treat it as a routine form-filling exercise. This is a serious mistake. The survey is structured to allow regulators to compare your declared controls against sector risk indicators and historical enforcement data. Responses that contradict your own AML policy, or that indicate controls you cannot evidence in practice, are flagged for follow-up inspection. Many businesses that fail on-site inspections first drew regulatory attention through poorly completed annual assessment surveys.

Which UAE Businesses Face the Highest AML Inspection Risk in 2026?

While every DNFBP and financial institution is subject to AML inspection UAE, regulators use a risk-based approach to prioritize who they inspect first, how often, and how deeply.

Sector

Inspection Risk 2026

Why

Real Estate Agents & Brokers

Very High

495 violations in H1 2025. Property transactions are a primary money laundering vehicle. MoET inspections are now routine and sector-wide.

Dealers in Precious Metals & Stones

Very High

473 violations in H1 2025. Cash-intensive transactions and cross-border supply chains attract constant scrutiny.

Auditors & Accounting Firms

High

Professional firms that manage client funds or provide corporate structuring advice are a FATF priority sector.

Corporate Service Providers (CSPs)

High

Company formation agents face the strictest UBO identification obligations. Complex ownership structures are a known money laundering typology.

Legal Consultants & Law Firms

Medium-High

Firms advising on transactions, corporate structuring, or real estate are DNFBPs. Client confidentiality does not override the obligation to file STRs.

Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs)

Very High

Newly brought into scope under Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025. Inspections are intensifying rapidly.

What Do Inspectors Actually Check During an AML Inspection in UAE?

This is the question every business owner asks and the one that most AML blogs fail to answer in practical detail. Here is exactly what Ministry of Economy inspectors and other UAE supervisory authorities examine during a DNFBP AML inspection 2026:

1. goAML Portal Registration and Filing History

The first thing inspectors verify is whether your business is registered on the goAML portal and whether your registration details are up to date and accurate. They then review your filing history, checking whether STRs and SARs have been submitted where required, whether filings were made within required timeframes, and whether the quality of reports is adequate. Businesses that have never filed a single STR despite operating in high-risk sectors immediately attract scrutiny.

2. AML Policy and Procedures Document

Inspectors review your written AML policy and procedures in detail. Generic, downloaded templates that do not reflect your actual business operations are one of the most commonly cited inspection failures. Your policy must be tailored to your specific business type, client base, transaction types, and risk exposure. It must also be dated, signed by senior management, and updated to reflect Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 and Cabinet Resolution 134 of 2025.

3. AML/CFT Risk Assessment

Inspectors check whether you have conducted a formal, documented business-wide AML/CFT risk assessment. They assess whether the risk assessment reflects your actual risk exposure rather than a generic sector template, and whether controls are proportionate to the identified risks. A risk assessment completed once and never reviewed is considered a significant gap.

4. Customer Due Diligence (CDD) and Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) Files

Inspectors select a sample of client files and assess whether CDD has been correctly conducted. They look for: identity verification documents; UBO declarations for corporate clients; risk categorization with a documented rationale; source of funds documentation for high-risk clients; evidence of EDD for PEPs and high-risk jurisdiction clients; and records of ongoing monitoring reviews. Missing, incomplete, or inconsistent CDD files are one of the most common findings during DNFBP AML inspections.

5. UBO (Ultimate Beneficial Owner) Documentation

The Ministry of Economy cites UBO identification failures in a significant proportion of inspection reports. Inspectors check whether UBOs have been identified and verified for all corporate clients, whether documentation is current, and whether UBO information is updated when ownership structures change.

6. Transaction Monitoring Evidence

Inspectors assess whether your transaction monitoring is operational and risk-based, not just documented on paper. For higher-volume businesses, they may request evidence of monitoring alerts, how they were investigated, and how decisions were documented. Businesses without evidence of active transaction monitoring in the UAE are considered high-risk.

7. MLRO Appointment and Competence

Inspectors verify that a qualified Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO) has been appointed, that the MLRO has the authority and independence to fulfill the role, and that internal suspicious activity reports are being properly received and evaluated. If the MLRO is an outsourced AML compliance officer UAE, inspectors check that the engagement is properly documented and that responsibilities are clearly defined.

8. AML Training Records

Inspectors request evidence that AML training UAE has been delivered to all relevant staff. Undocumented training is treated as if it never happened. They check the training dates, topics covered, attendance records, and whether training has been updated to reflect the new 2025 law and 2026 regulatory updates.

9. Sanctions Screening UAE Evidence

Inspectors check whether your business is conducting sanctions screening against the UAE, UN, OFAC, and EU sanctions lists as part of your standard client onboarding and ongoing monitoring workflow. They look for evidence of actual screening, not just a policy that says you screen.

10. Record Keeping and Document Organization

All CDD documents, transaction records, risk assessments, training records, and STR filings must be retained for a minimum of five years. Inspectors frequently cite poor document organization, incomplete files, and records that cannot be quickly produced during an inspection as compliance failures. Disorganized records are interpreted as evidence of an ineffective compliance culture.

Most Common AML Violations Found During UAE Inspections in 2026

Based on Ministry of Economy enforcement data and AMLUAE’s own experience working with UAE DNFBPs, these are the most frequently cited AML compliance violations UAE 2026:

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1. No goAML Registration or Inactive Registration

The most basic requirement is still one of the most commonly missed. Businesses that have never registered on the goAML portal face an immediate administrative penalty of AED 50,000, with no prior warning.

2. Generic or Outdated AML Policy

Using a downloaded template or a policy written for the 2018 law without updating it to comply with Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 is considered a significant violation. Inspectors can identify a generic policy within minutes.

3. Incomplete or Missing CDD Files

Client files missing identity verification documents, lacking UBO declarations, lacking a rationale for risk categorization, or lacking evidence of ongoing monitoring are among the most common inspection findings.

4. No UBO Documentation for Corporate Clients

Failure to identify and document the Ultimate Beneficial Owner of corporate clients is cited in a large proportion of Ministry of Economy inspection reports.

5. No STR Filed Despite Suspicious Activity

Businesses in high-risk sectors that have never filed a single Suspicious Transaction Report are viewed with deep skepticism by inspectors. The absence of STR filings is treated as evidence of either wilful blindness or an ineffective monitoring system.

6. No AML Training Records

Staff training that cannot be evidenced through dated attendance records, training materials, and assessment documentation is treated as if it never occurred. Regulators expect annual training as a minimum.

7. No Sanctions Screening UAE Process in Place

Businesses that cannot demonstrate an active, documented sanctions screening process are cited for this as a standalone violation. Saying you screen without evidence of actual screening outcomes is insufficient.

8. AML Annual Assessment Survey Errors

Responses to the AML annual assessment survey UAE that contradict your own written AML policy are flagged by regulators and often trigger follow-up on-site inspections.

9. No Formal AML/CFT Risk Assessment

Businesses that cannot produce a dated, documented business-wide risk assessment are cited for this as a fundamental compliance failure.

10. MLRO Not Appointed or Not Adequately Qualified

Appointing a junior staff member as MLRO without the authority, independence, or knowledge to fulfill the role is treated as equivalent to not having an MLRO at all.

Documents You Must Have Ready for an AML Inspection UAE 2026

When an inspection notice arrives or when an unannounced inspection begins, the following documents must be immediately producible:

  • AML Policy Document Written, signed, dated, and updated for Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025
  • AML/CFT Risk Assessment Current, with documented methodology and review date
  • MLRO Appointment Letter, including job description and evidence of competence
  • goAML Registration Confirmation: Active registration and STR/SAR filing history
  • CDD Client Files: Identity verification, risk categorization, UBO documentation, EDD records
  • AML Training Records: Dated attendance logs, training materials, and assessment results
  • Sanctions Screening Logs: Evidence of screening at onboarding and ongoing monitoring
  • Transaction Monitoring Records Alerts generated, investigations conducted, outcomes documented
  • Internal STR/SAR Log MLRO evaluation outcomes and external filing decisions
  • AML Annual Assessment Survey: Most recent submission and regulatory correspondence

AML Inspection Checklist UAE 2026: Are You Ready?

Use this AML inspection checklist UAE 2026 to assess your readiness right now. Every unchecked box is a potential violation:

  • goAML portal registration is active, current, and login credentials are accessible
  • The AML policy and procedures document is written, tailored to your business, signed, dated, and updated in accordance with the 2025 law.
  • The business-wide AML/CFT risk assessment is documented, current, and has been reviewed within the last 12 months.
  • MLRO is formally appointed with a documented role, adequate authority, and demonstrable competence
  • CDD has been completed for all clients, new and existing, with files organized and immediately producible
  • EDD has been applied to all PEPs, high-risk jurisdiction clients, and complex ownership structures
  • UBO has been identified and documented for all corporate clients
  • Sanctions screening UAE is being conducted at onboarding and periodically thereafter, with evidence retained.
  • Transaction monitoring UAE is operational, and alerts are being reviewed and documented.
  • AML training UAE has been delivered to all relevant staff within the last 12 months, with attendance records retained
  • An internal STR/SAR log is maintained, and the MLRO has made documented filing decisions.
  • The AML annual assessment survey UAE has been completed accurately and consistently with your documented policies.
  • All records are retained for a minimum of five years and are organized for rapid retrieval.

How to Prepare for an AML Inspection in UAE 2026: A Step-by-Step Guide

Step 1: Run an AML/CFT Health Check immediately.

Before anything else, assess your current position honestly against what inspectors will look for. An AML/CFT Health Check from AMLUAE replicates the inspection process, identifying every gap so you know exactly what needs to be fixed and in what order.

Step 2: Update or create your AML policy and procedures

If your policy is generic, outdated, or was written for the 2018 law, it needs to be rewritten. AMLUAE’s AML/CFT Policy & Documentation service produces a fully customized, regulator-ready document, updated in line with Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025.

Step 3: Commission or update your AML/CFT risk assessment

A current, documented risk assessment is non-negotiable. Commission a formal AML/CFT Risk Assessment Report if you do not have one or yours has not been reviewed in over 12 months.

Step 4: Audit your CDD and UBO files.

Conduct a systematic review of all client files. For every client: verify identity documents are present and current, confirm risk categorization is documented, check UBO documentation for all corporate clients, and ensure EDD is on file for high-risk clients and PEPs.

Step 5: Verify your goAML registration and filing status

Log in to the goAML portal, confirm your registration details are accurate and current, and review your STR/SAR filing history.

Step 6: Confirm your MLRO appointment is properly documented

Ensure your MLRO has a formal appointment letter, a documented role description, and can demonstrate adequate knowledge of UAE AML law. If you are using an outsourced AML compliance officer UAE, ensure the engagement is properly documented.

Step 7: Deliver and document AML training for all staff

If your last training session was more than 12 months ago, or if you have no training records, schedule AML training UAE for all relevant staff immediately. AMLUAE’s AML Training Program covers all 2026 regulatory requirements and produces full attendance records.

Step 8: Test your sanctions screening UAE process.

Run your existing client base through your sanctions screening UAE process and document the results. AMLUAE’s AML Software solutions can automate this for you.

Step 9: Organize all documents for rapid retrieval.

Create an organized AML compliance file covering all documents listed in the previous section. The ability to produce any document within minutes signals to regulators that your compliance framework is genuinely operational.

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Step 10: Review your AML annual assessment survey responses

Review your previous AML annual assessment survey UAE responses against your current documentation. Any inconsistency between what you declared and what your files show should be resolved before an inspection.

Is the inspection notice received or overdue?

AMLUAE provides urgent AML inspection readiness support, including same-week policy drafting, CDD file review, risk assessment commissioning, and MLRO support across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and all UAE free zones.

What Happens If Your Business Fails an AML Inspection?

Financial Penalties

Administrative fines for AML compliance violations UAE range from AED 50,000 to AED 5,000,000 per violation. For specific violations, such as failing to register on the goAML portal, penalties start at AED 50,000 with no prior warning. For severe or repeated violations, fines can reach AED 100 million at the corporate level. Multiple violations identified in a single inspection can result in cumulative fines that are business-ending for SMEs.

Criminal Liability for Managers

This is the most significant change introduced by Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025. Individual managers, directors, and compliance officers can now face personal criminal prosecution and imprisonment for AML failures, not just the corporate entity. The lowered knowledge threshold means that negligence or wilful blindness is sufficient for liability.

Public Disclosure

The Ministry of Economy and other supervisory authorities are increasingly publishing enforcement actions, including naming specific businesses that have been fined. In sectors like real estate and financial services, public disclosure can cause client losses that far exceed the value of the fine itself.

License Suspension or Cancellation

For persistent or severe non-compliance, supervisory authorities have the power to suspend or cancel your trade license. This is an existential consequence that goes beyond financial penalty.

Supervisory Risk Profile

A failed anti money laundering inspection UAE places your business on a heightened supervisory risk profile, meaning more frequent inspections, deeper reviews, and closer scrutiny of all future regulatory submissions.

The FATF Mutual Evaluation and What It Means for AML Inspection UAE 2026

Understanding why UAE AML inspections are so intense in 2026 requires understanding the FATF context. The Financial Action Task Force’s Fifth Round Mutual Evaluation of the UAE, the most rigorous external assessment of the country’s AML/CFT framework, is anticipated in mid-2026.

FATF assessors do not just review legislation. They assess whether regulated businesses are genuinely operationally compliant, and they do this by reviewing the Ministry of Economy’s inspection records, enforcement data, and supervisory effectiveness. UAE regulators need to demonstrate to FATF that the businesses they supervise are actually compliant, not just technically registered.

This is why inspection rates have increased by 300% since 2021, why the AML compliance inspection 2026 is more detailed than any previous cycle, and why the period leading up to the FATF evaluation is the most dangerous time to be non-compliant. Regulators in this period are significantly less inclined to issue warnings than fines.

Do Not Wait for the Inspection Notice to Start Preparing

The Ministry of Economy does not issue warnings before fines. Inspections can arrive with 48 hours’ notice or no notice at all. The only safe position is permanent inspection readiness.

Whether you are starting your anti money laundering in UAE compliance journey from scratch, updating an existing framework for Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025, or urgently preparing for an upcoming DNFBP inspection AMLUAE has the service that fits exactly where you are.

We serve businesses across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah, and all UAE free zones, including DIFC, ADGM, JAFZA, DMCC, and Meydan.

FAQ: AML Inspection UAE 2026

How much notice does the Ministry of Economy give before an AML inspection in UAE?

The Ministry of Economy typically gives between 48 hours and 5 working days' notice before an AML inspection in UAE. For high-risk DNFBP sectors such as real estate and gold trading, unannounced inspections with zero notice are increasingly common in 2026. The only reliable approach is to maintain permanent AML inspection readiness rather than relying on notice periods to prepare.

How often does the Ministry of Economy inspect DNFBPs in UAE?

In 2026, the Ministry of Economy inspected DNFBPs in the UAE at least annually, focusing on high-risk sectors, with some businesses receiving multiple inspections within a single year. Inspection rates have increased by over 300% since 2021. Businesses with previous enforcement actions face significantly more frequent reviews based on their supervisory risk profile.

What are the most common AML violations found during UAE inspections?

The most common AML violations found during UAE inspections in 2026 are: no goAML portal registration, generic or outdated AML policy, incomplete CDD and UBO files, no STR filed despite operating in a high-risk sector, missing AML training records, no active sanctions screening process, and inconsistencies between AML annual assessment survey responses and actual documentation.

What is the AML annual assessment survey for DNFBPs in the UAE?

The AML annual assessment survey in the UAE is a mandatory questionnaire issued by the Ministry of Economy to all DNFBPs every year. It assesses your compliance controls, filing history, and risk management practices. Responses are scored and benchmarked against peer firms. Poorly completed surveys or answers that contradict your own AML policy frequently trigger follow-up on-site inspections.

Can the Ministry of Economy inspect my free zone company?

Yes, the Ministry of Economy can inspect free zone companies in the UAE. Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 applies to all businesses in the UAE, regardless of free zone registration. DIFC and ADGM companies are inspected by the DFSA and FSRA, respectively. All DNFBPs across all UAE free zones must maintain full AML compliance, including goAML registration, CDD, and STR obligations.

How do I prepare for an AML inspection in UAE 2026?

To prepare for an AML inspection in UAE 2026, ensure you have: an active goAML registration, a current tailored AML policy updated for Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025, a documented risk assessment reviewed within 12 months, complete CDD and UBO files for all clients, AML training records for all staff, active sanctions screening, and a qualified MLRO formally appointed with documented responsibilities.

What happens if my business fails an AML inspection in UAE?

If your business fails an AML inspection in UAE, consequences include financial fines from AED 50,000 to AED 5 million per violation, personal criminal liability for individual managers and directors under Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025, public disclosure of enforcement actions, trade license suspension or cancellation, and placement on a heightened supervisory risk profile with more frequent future inspections.

What documents do inspectors check during an AML inspection in UAE?

During an AML inspection in UAE, inspectors check: your written AML policy and procedures, AML/CFT risk assessment, MLRO appointment letter, goAML registration and STR filing history, a sample of CDD and UBO client files, AML training attendance records, sanctions screening logs, transaction monitoring evidence, internal STR/SAR log, and your most recent AML annual assessment survey submission.

How much are AML fines for DNFBPs in UAE 2026?

AML fines for DNFBPs in UAE 2026 range from AED 50,000 to AED 5 million per violation under Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025. Failing to register on the goAML portal alone carries an immediate penalty of AED 50,000. Corporate fines for the most serious violations can reach AED 100 million. Individual managers also face personal criminal prosecution and imprisonment.

How does anti money laundering inspection in the UAE differ in 2026 compared to previous years?

Anti money laundering inspection in the UAE in 2026 is fundamentally stricter than in previous years. Inspection rates have increased by 300% since 2021, unannounced visits are now routine, and inspectors assess operational effectiveness, not just the existence of policy. Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 introduced personal criminal liability for managers, and the upcoming FATF mutual evaluation indicates regulators will enforce with zero tolerance for non-compliance.

What is AML compliance in the UAE?

AML compliance in the UAE refers to the legal obligations businesses must meet to detect and prevent money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing. It is governed by Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025 and Cabinet Resolution 134 of 2025. All financial institutions and DNFBPs, including real estate agents, gold traders, auditors, and corporate service providers, must comply.

Who needs AML compliance in the UAE?

All financial institutions and Designated Non-Financial Businesses and Professions (DNFBPs) in the UAE must comply with AML requirements. DNFBPs include real estate agents, auditors, accounting firms, legal consultants, dealers in precious metals and precious stones, company formation agents, and corporate service providers. Business size does not determine compliance obligation; only the business category does.

What is the penalty for AML non-compliance in UAE?

The penalty for AML non-compliance in UAE ranges from AED 50,000 to AED 5 million per violation under Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025. Individual managers face personal criminal prosecution and imprisonment. Additional penalties include asset freezes, suspension or cancellation of trade licenses, and public disclosure of enforcement actions by the Ministry of Economy.

What are the anti money laundering in UAE requirements for 2026?

The anti money laundering in UAE requirements for 2026 include: goAML portal registration, a written AML/CFT policy, a documented risk assessment, MLRO appointment, Customer Due Diligence (CDD) and Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) for all clients, UBO identification for corporate clients, Suspicious Transaction Report (STR) filing, sanctions screening, annual AML staff training, and record retention for a minimum of five years.

What is a DNFBP in the UAE?

A DNFBP in the UAE is a Designated Non-Financial Business or Profession, a non-bank business that is exposed to money laundering risk and regulated under UAE AML law. DNFBP categories include real estate agents, auditors, accountants, legal consultants, dealers in precious metals and precious stones, company formation agents, and corporate service providers. All DNFBPs must comply with full AML/CFT obligations under Federal Decree-Law No. 10 of 2025.