For decades, the European Union’s (EU) framework for anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) relied on directives that allowed the member states considerable flexibility in transposition. This patchwork approach created uneven standards, inconsistent enforcement and gaps that financial criminals could exploit.
The 2024 reforms sought to correct this by introducing directly applicable regulations, eliminating divergences between the member states, and creating a powerful supervisory body, i.e., the Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA).
The reforms represent more than just another iteration of EU law. By elevating sanctions compliance to the core of AML/CFT, mandating interconnected beneficial ownership registers and centralising supervision, they transition the EU from a decentralised framework to one of the most harmonised regimes worldwide.