23 November 2025
FATF ¦ R.25 Transparency and Beneficial Ownership of Legal Arrangements
Recommendation 25: Strengthening Transparency and Beneficial Ownership of Legal Arrangements
Recommendation 25 addresses a central vulnerability in the fight against money laundering, terrorist financing and proliferation financing: the opacity of trusts and similar legal arrangements. These vehicles can mask the true human actors behind assets and transactions, enabling criminals and illicit actors to hide proceeds, launder funds or shield assets from scrutiny. The Recommendation requires countries to identify the risks and to ensure that accurate, up-to-date information on express trusts and equivalent arrangements is available to competent authorities in a timely and efficient way.
Scope of the requirement
At its core, Recommendation 25 asks states to require trustees and persons in equivalent roles to obtain and hold basic and beneficial ownership information about the legal arrangements they administer or oversee. This includes identity details for settlors, trustees, protectors (where applicable), beneficiaries (or classes of beneficiaries), and any natural persons who exercise ultimate effective control. Where parties to the arrangement are legal persons or other arrangements, trustees must also obtain and hold ownership information about those entities. Trustees should also record information about other regulated agents and service providers involved with the arrangement, such as investment advisers, accountants and tax advisors.
Transparency measures and public information
Countries that have express trusts and similar arrangements under their law should map and document the different types and forms of these structures, explain how they are set up, and describe how basic and beneficial ownership information is collected. That mapping and description should be publicly available to promote legal clarity and to guide regulated entities and supervisors.
Risk assessment and mitigation
States must assess money laundering and terrorist financing risks associated with different types of trusts and similar arrangements, focusing both on those governed by domestic law and those administered or managed within their jurisdiction. The assessment should also consider foreign arrangements that have sufficient links to the jurisdiction — examples of sufficient links include significant local investments, tax residency, or ongoing business relationships with domestic financial institutions or designated non-financial businesses and professions (DNFBPs). Based on identified risks, countries should take proportionate steps to mitigate and manage vulnerabilities.
Disclosure obligations and cooperation with regulated sectors
Trustees and equivalents must disclose their status to financial institutions and DNFBPs when they form a business relationship or conduct occasional transactions above relevant thresholds. They must be able to cooperate with competent authorities and not be prevented by law from providing necessary information about the trust or arrangement. Similarly, trustees should not be prevented from furnishing financial institutions and DNFBPs, upon legitimate request, with information on beneficial ownership and assets related to the trust in the context of a business relationship.
Sources for obtaining ownership information
To ensure competent authorities can efficiently obtain the required information without having to rely solely on trustees, the Recommendation encourages using multiple information sources, including:
- public authorities or bodies that hold beneficial ownership information (for example central registries of trusts or asset registries);
- other competent authorities, such as tax administrations, which may collect relevant asset and income information; and
- regulated private actors, including trust and company service providers, investment managers, accountants, lawyers and financial institutions.
Quality, verification and retention of information
Countries should ensure mechanisms exist so that information on trusts and similar arrangements is adequate, accurate and up-to-date.
Adequate information must be sufficient to identify the natural persons who are beneficial owners and to define their roles in the arrangement.
Accurate information must be verified using reliable documents, data or other information with a verification intensity adjusted according to risk.
Up-to-date information must be refreshed within a reasonable period following any change.
Trustees and equivalents should retain these records for at least five years after their involvement with the arrangement ceases; authorities are encouraged to apply similar retention requirements to other holders of relevant information.
Access by competent authorities and international cooperation
Law enforcement, financial intelligence units and other competent authorities must have powers to obtain timely access to basic and beneficial ownership information, the residence of trustees, and any assets held or managed by financial institutions or DNFBPs in relation to the trusts and equivalents. Countries should facilitate rapid, constructive and effective international cooperation for exchanging beneficial ownership information, including enabling domestic authorities to respond to foreign requests, and not placing undue restrictions on information exchange on grounds such as bank secrecy or fiscal matters. Where feasible, jurisdictions should designate and publicize the agency responsible for responding to requests for beneficial ownership information.
Liability and sanctions
Recommendation 25 requires clear responsibilities and legal consequences for non‑compliance. Trustees and persons in equivalent positions should be legally liable for failures to maintain, provide or update required information or should face effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions — criminal, civil or administrative — for such failures. Equally, sanctions should apply for obstructing timely access by competent authorities.
Practical considerations for implementation
Effective implementation requires proportional, risk-based measures. Not all trusts present the same level of risk: charitable trusts and statutory non‑charitable trusts with no ascertainable beneficiaries at set-up may reasonably be treated differently, with full identification of individual beneficiaries required only when they become entitled or exercise vested rights. States may use a mix of public registries, cooperative arrangements with tax authorities or sectoral information hubs to ensure accessibility and timeliness of data. Where legal traditions do not formally recognise trusts, the Recommendation’s obligations can be fulfilled through existing legal duties, common law obligations or administrative requirements.
Conclusion
Recommendation 25 closes a critical gap by making transparency of trusts and similar arrangements a global standard. By requiring trustees to collect and maintain detailed beneficial ownership information, by promoting multiple information sources, and by ensuring competent authorities and cross‑border partners have timely access, the Recommendation reduces opportunities for misuse. For policymakers, the task is to design proportionate, risk‑based systems — covering data collection, verification, retention, access and sanctions — that fit domestic legal frameworks while meeting the FATF standard’s core goal: exposing the natural persons who ultimately control assets and activity so that illicit financial flows can be detected, investigated and disrupted.
FATF Ratings Overview
Luxembourg ¦ FATF Effectiveness & Technical Compliance Ratings
Anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing measures
Luxembourg Mutual Evaluation Report, September 2023
This assessment was adopted by the FATF at its June 2023 Plenary meeting and summarises the anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing (AML/CFT) measures in place in Luxembourg as at the date of the on-site visit: 2-18 November 2022.
Table 1. Effectiveness Ratings
Note: Effectiveness ratings can be either a High- HE, Substantial- SE, Moderate- ME, or Low – LE, level of effectiveness.
IO1 Risk, policy and coordination
Money laundering and terrorist financing risks are identified, assessed and understood, policies are co-operatively developed and, where appropriate, actions co-ordinated domestically to combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism.
Substantial
IO2 International cooperation
International co-operation delivers appropriate information, financial intelligence and evidence, and facilitates action against criminals and their property.
Substantial
IO3 Supervision
Supervisors appropriately supervise, monitor and regulate financial institutions and VASPs for compliance with AML/CFT requirements, and financial institutions and VASPs adequately apply AML/CFT preventive measures, and report suspicious transactions. The actions taken by supervisors, financial institutions and VASPs are commensurate with the risks.
Moderate
IO4 Preventive measures
Supervisors appropriately supervise, monitor and regulate DNFBPs for compliance with AML/CFT requirements, and DNFBPs adequately apply AML/CFT preventive measures commensurate with the risks, and report suspicious transactions.
Moderate
IO5 Legal persons and arrangements
Legal persons and arrangements are prevented from misuse for money laundering or terrorist financing, and information on their beneficial ownership is available to competent authorities without impediments.
Substantial
IO6 Financial intelligence
Financial intelligence and all other relevant information are appropriately used by competent authorities for money laundering and terrorist financing investigations.
Substantial
IO7 ML investigation & prosecution
Money laundering offences and activities are investigated, and offenders are prosecuted and subject to effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions.
Moderate
IO8 Confiscation
Asset recovery processes lead to confiscation and permanent deprivation of criminal property and property of corresponding value.
Moderate
IO9 TF investigation & prosecution
Terrorist financing offences and activities are investigated and persons who finance terrorism are prosecuted and subject to effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions.
Substantial
IO10 TF preventive measures & financial sanctions
Terrorists, terrorist organisations and terrorist financiers are prevented from raising, moving and using funds.
Moderate
IO11 PF financial sanctions
Persons and entities involved in the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction are prevented from raising, moving and using funds, consistent with the relevant UNSCRs.
Moderate
Table 2. Technical Compliance Ratings
Note: Technical compliance ratings can be either a C – compliant, LC – largely compliant, PC – partially compliant or NC – non compliant.
R.1 Assessing Risks and applying a Risk-Based Approach
C – compliant
R.2 National Co-operation and Co-ordination
C – compliant
R.3 Money laundering offence
C – compliant
R.4 Confiscation and provisional measures
LC – largely compliant
R.5 Terrorist financing offence
C – compliant
R.6 Targeted financial sanctions related to terrorism and terrorist financing
LC – largely compliant
R.7 Targeted financial sanctions related to proliferation
LC – largely compliant
R.8 Non-profit organisations
PC – partially compliant
R.9 Financial institution secrecy laws
C – compliant
R.10 Customer due diligence
C – compliant
R.11 Record-keeping
C – compliant
R.12 Politically exposed persons
C – compliant
R.13 Correspondent banking
C – compliant
R.14 Money or value transfer services (MVTS)
C – compliant
R.15 New technologies
LC – largely compliant
R.16 Payment transparency
C – compliant
R.17 Reliance on third parties
C – compliant
R.19 Higher-risk countries
C – compliant
R.20 Reporting of suspicious transactions
C – compliant
R.21 Tipping-off and confidentiality
C – compliant
R.22 DNFBPs: Customer due diligence
C – compliant
R.23 DNFBPs: Other measures
C – compliant
R.24 Transparency and beneficial ownership of legal persons
LC – largely compliant
R.27 Powers of supervisors
C – compliant
R.28 Regulation and supervision of DNFBPs
C – compliant
R.29 Financial intelligence units
C – compliant
R.30 Responsibilities of law enforcement and investigative authorities
LC – largely compliant
R.32 Cash Couriers
LC – largely compliant
R.33 Statistics
LC – largely compliant
R.34 Guidance and feedback
C – compliant
R.35 Sanctions
LC – largely compliant
R.36 International instruments
LC – largely compliant
R.37 Mutual legal assistance
C – compliant
R.38 Mutual legal assistance: freezing and confiscation
C – compliant
R.39 Extradition
C – compliant
R.40 Other forms of international co-operation
LC – largely compliant