AMLA will have two main areas of activity: AML/CFT supervision and supporting EU Financial Intelligence Units (FIUs).
AMLA will become the centre of an integrated system of national AML/CFT supervisory authorities, ensuring their mutual support and cooperation. Supervisory convergence and a common supervisory culture will be basic features of the system. In the financial sector, it will directly supervise a number of selected financial sector entities that are exposed to the high risk of money laundering and terrorism financing and operate on cross border basis in at least six Member States. Additionally, it will be able to take over supervision of any obliged entity on request from the national supervisor, or on its own initiative, where there is a Union interest to do so.
Concerning FIUs, the Authority will facilitate cooperation, information exchange and identification of best practices among FIUs. It will carry out these tasks by establishing standards for reporting and information exchange, by initiating or organising and supporting joint operational analyses, organising peer reviews among FIUs, and by hosting and developing the FIU.net system used both by FIUs and Europol to exchange and cross-match information. AMLA will itself be an end-user of the system and its functionalities. The Authority will also have a coordination and convergence role in the non-financial sector.
No. National supervisors and FIUs will continue playing their roles as key elements in the EU AML/CFT public policy.
In the supervisory area, the AML/CFT package creates an integrated EU AML supervisory system closely involving AMLA and the national supervisors. AMLA will directly supervise a small number of cross-border financial sector entities, based on the risk coming from the size, or the most extended business across the UE, among other factors.
AMLA will also play a key role in initiating and providing operational support to national FIUs in the conduct of joint analyses, but will not be an FIU itself and will not replace national FIUs who will continue to be the sole recipients of reports on suspicious transactions and responsible for the national dissemination of the analytical results of such reports.
Directly supervised financial institutions will be determined in three ways:
- Financial sector obliged entities that are active in at least six Member States and have a high residual risk profile in accordance with the level 2 methodology to be developed by AMLA will be selected for ongoing direct supervision by the Authority. This selection will be based on objective criteria focused on large cross-border activity and risk categorisation. The list will be reviewed periodically, every three years. In order to ensure equal and fair selection, the methodology for risk categorisation of entities by national supervisors will be harmonised prior to the first selection. The first selection process based on harmonised methodology will be carried out by AMLA in 2027, with the selected entities transferred to EU-level supervision as of 2028.
- It will be possible for the Authority to request a Commission decision placing a financial sector obliged entity under its direct supervision, irrespective of the above-mentioned criteria for a limited period of time. This can happen if there is an indication that an entity is systematically failing to meet its AML/CFT requirements and that a significant ML/TF risk may materialise, should the national supervisor be unable to take quick, effective action to deal with such risks as recommended by the Authority.
- A national supervisor may request the Authority to take over the direct supervision of an obliged entity in exceptional circumstances with the aim of addressing at Union level a heightened ML/TF risk or compliance failures by the obliged entity in question. The Authority will assess the existence of circumstances justifying the transfer of supervision and may agree to assume direct supervision of the obliged entity for a limited period of time.
Supervision by AMLA will be carried out by Joint Supervisory Teams led by staff of the Authority and including staff of the relevant national supervisors. This model is drawn from the working methods of the EU Single Supervisory Mechanism for the prudential supervision of banks.
As a result of the negotiations, the Union will benefit from synergies between AML/CFT rules and the EU sanctions regime, making it more difficult to circumvent sanctions. As direct supervisor, AMLA will check compliance with sanctions-related measures by the riskiest cross-border groups in the financial sector. It will also contribute to a common supervisory approach to verification of compliance with sanctions-related requirements. Finally, given its central role in the Union’s AML/CFT framework, it will be able to provide critical input to the understanding and mitigation of risks of sanctions evasion/non-implementation at Union level.
The Authority will have two decision-making bodies, with the same Chair, who will represent it externally:
- The Executive Board, composed of the Chair and five permanent independent members;
- The General Board, which will have two possible compositions: a supervisory composition with heads of public authorities responsible for AML supervision, and an FIU composition with heads of FIUs from all Member States.
The General Board will adopt all regulatory instruments. In its supervisory composition, it may also provide its opinion on any decision about directly supervised obliged entities prepared by a Joint Supervisory team before the adoption of the final decision by the Executive Board.
The Executive Board will take all decisions towards individual obliged entities or individual supervisory authorities where relevant. The Executive Board will also take decisions regarding the draft budget and other matters relating to operations and the functioning of the Authority. For this latter category of the decisions, the Commission will have a voting right on the Executive Board.
The Authority will also have an Executive Director in charge of the day-to-day management of the Authority; she/he will be administratively responsible for budget implementation, resources, staff and procurement.
The governance and decision-making structure of AMLA is composed of the Chair, five full-time Board Members and an Executive Director.
The vacancy notices for these positions are all published in the Official Journal and on the EPSO website section “Job vacancies | EU Careers”.
The timeline for these publications was June 2024 for the position of the Chair, September 2024 for the positions of the five Board Members and will be around end 2024/early 2025 for the Executive Director.
Middle management positions will be published from the first semester of 2025.
The AMLA Task Force is based in the European Commission’s Directorate General for Financial Stability, Financial Markets and Capital Markets Union (DG FISMA). It is the lead service supporting the establishment of the new Authority for Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AMLA).
The Task Force is initiating and coordinating the preparatory steps for setting up the new Authority (AMLA), to ensure that the first administrative decisions and the basic steps needed to make AMLA operational are taken within a reasonably short timeframe.
It is the responsibility of the AMLA Task Force to ensure that the first decisions and actions can be taken rapidly and effectively following the publication of the AMLA Regulation in the Official Journal (in June 2024).
The actions cover some areas such as:
- The selection of suitable facilities for AMLA, including a building, equipment, and services;
- The gradual recruitment of administrative and operational staff;
- The support for setting up the Agency’s governance, including the pre-selection of AMLA’s Chair, Executive Board members, and Executive Director, in close collaboration with the Commission’s DG FISMA and DG Human Resources (DG HR);
- The execution of the Agency’s 2024 budget and preparation of future budgetary plans;
- The design and implementation of the IT architecture needed to support AMLA’s operations.
26 June 2024: AMLA is legally established
End of 2024 / beginning of 2025: AMLA Chair is selected, she/he will publicly and legally represent AMLA
First quarter of 2025: AMLA opens its new office in Frankfurt and has an Executive Board; AMLA starts working on some level 2 & 3 measures and other policy projects
Summer 2025: AMLA starts operations, and consults on some implementing rules
End of 2025: AMLA staff is around 80; IT support for AMLA's administration and the transfer of the EuReCA database become operational
During 2026: Gradual ramping up of IT business service and assessment of AMLA’s future IT needs
During 2027: 40 obliged entities are selected to be directly supervised
End of 2027: AMLA staff reaches a cruising capacity of about 430
January 2028: Start of direct supervision, with AMLA fully operational
AMLA has been legally created on 26 June 2024, with the objective of starting most of its activities in mid-2025, reaching full staffing by end 2027, and beginning direct supervision of certain high-risk financial entities in 2028 (once the harmonized rulebook is completed and applicable).
AMLA’s seat is in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. This was the first time that the co-legislators jointly agreed on the location of a seat of a decentralised agency. The Parliament and the Council representatives voted together with the same number of votes in an inter-institutional meeting at the Council premises in February 2024.
Prior to that, the European Commission prepared an assessment of the applications from nine Member States and all nine applicants presented their application in joint hearings that took place in the European Parliament on 30 January 2024.
In their application to host AMLA, the German authorities have indicated several buildings in Frankfurt am Main that may suit the Authority premises’ needs. The European Commission is completing its analysis with a view to selecting a building and then negotiating the lease. As required by the EU Financial Regulation, before the contract is concluded, the building project will be presented to the European Parliament and the Council of the EU.
Once the Authority has reached the necessary staff numbers, approximately 30% of its funding will come from the EU budget and approximately 70% from financial contributions paid by a range of financial sector obliged entities. Non-financial obliged entities will not have to pay, nor will other financial sector obliged entities that do not meet the relevant selection criteria for direct supervision.
The financial contributions will cover expenses related to direct supervision, and expenses related to other tasks performed by AMLA in the area of indirect supervision of the financial sector. The methodology for determining the size of individual contributions by the financial sector obliged entities will be laid down in a Commission Delegated Act.
AMLA’s annual budget will gradually increase from 2024 to 2027 to reflect recruitment ramp-up and initial infrastructure investments, including ICT. The Authority is expected to be fully staffed by the end of 2027. A total funding of just above EUR 119 million will be made available to the Authority for that period.
From 2028 onwards, approximately 70% of the Authority’s budget will be funded by fees. For a full year, at full operation, for example for 2028, the total costs to be covered by fees are currently estimated at EUR 65 million. It should be noted that this estimated fee revenue is based upon standard average costing and the actual fee revenue would differ from this estimate. The remaining 30% of the Authority’s budget for the same year will be funded by the European Union’s contribution, estimated at approximately EUR 27 million. The annual budget of the Authority from 2028 onwards is therefore estimated at EUR 92 million.
It is envisaged that the Authority will reach over 430 staff members over a horizon of 4 years. Of these, over 200 will work on direct supervision of certain obliged entities. They will work in joint supervisory teams that will include staff of the relevant national supervisors of these entities.
The first open selection procedures for the staff will be opened by the end of 2024/early 2025. Vacancies will be published on the AMLA website and on the EPSO website (section “Job vacancies | EU Careers”).
Given that AMLA is in the setting-up phase, its recruitment needs will be significant in the next three years. By the end of 2025, AMLA plans to recruit approximately 80 staff members and experts across various domains: anti-money laundering, legal, budget, human resources, IT specialists, communication experts etc.
No, we do not accept spontaneous applications. Please regularly visit this website or the EPSO website section “Job vacancies | EU Careers” and apply online for any position that you are interested in and for which you meet all the requirements. Only applications sent to the relevant functional mailbox before the closing time of an open selection procedure will be accepted.
The first batch of external positions for candidates with relevant profiles will be published around January/February 2025.
No, vacancies at AMLA are only open to nationals of EU Members States.
AMLA never asks for information related to nor intervenes in the processing of financial transfers to citizens. AMLA will not issue fines, fees or sanctions on individual citizens.
If someone has contacted you pretending to be a member of AMLA -or operating on behalf of-and is offering you a refund, or help to recover money, this is an attempted scam. We recommend that you do not comply with the request and file a complaint with your national authorities.
Investigating concrete allegations of crime is out of the scope of AMLA's mandate. The investigation or prosecution of individual cases of money laundering does not fall within its remit. It remains within the competence of national authorities in the European Union.