Compliance
US Treasury Delays AML, CTF Regulations For Two Years

Despite the delay, RIAs are urged to begin the process of complying with requirements for the new rule sooner rather than later. There is a general trend of governments tightening controls on money laundering and other illicit financial behavior.
The US Treasury has postponed introducing its new
anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorism financing regulations
by two years until January 1, 2028. The government said it
wants to “ensure efficient regulation that appropriately balances
costs and benefits.”
Ironically, the announcement comes days after Family Wealth
Report issued several articles (here,
here, and
here) spelling out the work that RIAs, some of which are
multi-family offices, must do to prepare for the regulations,
originally slated for the start of 2026.
The Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN)
yesterday announced the delay. It said it would revisit the
scope of the requirements for RIAs and “exempt reporting advisors
at a “future date.” The regulations are known as the “IA AML
Rule.”
“The IA AML Rule seeks to address ongoing illicit finance risks,
threats, and vulnerabilities posed by criminals and foreign
adversaries that exploit the US financial system and assets
through investment advisors,” the Treasury said in its statement.
“FinCEN recognizes, however, that the rule must be effectively
tailored to the diverse business models and risk profiles of the
investment adviser sector.
“FinCEN also recognizes that extending the effective date of the
rule may help ease potential compliance costs for industry and
reduce regulatory uncertainty while FinCEN undertakes a broader
review of the IA AML Rule,” it said.
Despite the delay, RIAs are urged to begin the process of
complying with requirements for the new rule sooner rather than
later.
“While FinCEN will work through the rulemaking process to extend
the effective date, FinCEN intends to provide the IA sector with
regulatory certainty by issuing appropriate exemptive relief
delaying the effective date,” the Treasury said. “During the
delayed effective date, FinCEN intends to revisit the substance
of the IA AML Rule through a future rulemaking process and,
together with the Securities and Exchange Commission, also
intends to revisit the joint proposed rule establishing customer
identification program rule requirements for investment advisers,
Customer Identification Programs for Registered Investment
Advisers and Exempt Reporting Advisers.”
While this is a delay, it is unclear at this stage what the final
shape of new regulations will be. Under the Donald Trump
administration, there has been a tendency to row back from
certain regulatory moves. Controversially, earlier this
year, the US narrowed the scope of the beneficial ownership
reporting requirements under The Corporate Transparency Act. (See
here for a
detailed analysis from this news service.)
For those in the sector who wish to comment on this issue, please
email the editor at tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com.