The UAE Ministry of Economy issued over AED 42 million in administrative fines in 2025 — in a single AML enforcement campaign targeting Designated Non-Financial Businesses and Professions (DNFBPs) across the country.
Over 1,000 violations were identified. Real estate brokerage firms and dealers in precious metals and stones (DPMS) bore the largest share. If your business operates in either sector, the message from regulators is unambiguous: AML compliance in the UAE is actively enforced, and the cost of non-compliance is significant.
This article breaks down what happened, who was affected, what inspectors looked for, and what full AML compliance requires from a UAE DNFBP today.
What the 2025 UAE AML Enforcement Campaign Found
The 2025 campaign conducted by the Ministry of Economy was not limited to a single emirate or sector. It was a nationwide sweep across all DNFBP categories, combining desk reviews with on-site field inspections.
The breakdown by sector:
- AED 18.5 million in fines levied against real estate brokerage firms
- AED 20 million assessed against dealers in precious metals and gemstones (DPMS)
- AED 4+ million applied to corporate service providers and audit firms
Real estate and DPMS together account for over 92% of total fines. These are not peripheral sectors — they are the primary targets of UAE AML enforcement.
Why Real Estate and DPMS Are the Priority Targets
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) — the global body that evaluates AML frameworks — has consistently identified real estate and high-value goods dealers as among the highest-risk sectors for money laundering exposure.
The UAE, as a FATF member under active monitoring, has aligned its enforcement priorities accordingly.
Real estate transactions in the UAE regularly involve:
- Large cash sums
- International buyers
- Complex ownership structures
- Multi-party transactions
DPMS businesses deal in portable, high-value assets with liquid international markets. Both sectors present significant exposure to the placement and layering stages of money laundering.
What AML Inspectors Are Actually Checking
The 2025 inspections were not random audits. They followed a structured methodology targeting the most common compliance gaps across UAE DNFBPs:
- GoAML Registration and Activity — Is your account active? Does your filing activity reflect your actual transaction volume?
- AML Manual — Is it current, specific to your business, and demonstrably implemented — not a generic download?
- Business Risk Assessment (BRA) — Has it been updated to reflect your current client base, transaction types, and risk exposure?
- KYC and CDD Files — Are they complete, consistent, and producible on demand for every client and transaction?
- Sanctions and PEP Screening — Has every client been screened using a recognised tool such as World-Check?
- Staff Training — Has your team been trained, and can you document when, who attended, and what was covered?
A single gap in any of these areas is sufficient grounds for a violation notice. Multiple gaps compound quickly.
The Most Common Reason Businesses Get Fined
It is rarely deliberate non-compliance. The most common pattern seen in UAE AML enforcement actions is a business that set up its compliance framework once — registered on GoAML, drafted an AML Manual, completed an initial BRA — and then never maintained it.
Eighteen months later:
- The GoAML account is inactive
- The BRA reflects a client profile that no longer exists
- The AML Manual hasn't been updated since a regulatory change was issued
- KYC files for recent transactions are incomplete
The compliance framework exists on paper. It does not exist in practice. Inspectors are specifically trained to identify exactly this pattern.
What Full AML Compliance Requires in the UAE
AML compliance under UAE Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2018 is not a one-time registration. It is a continuous, maintained framework.
For DNFBPs — including real estate agencies and DPMS businesses — full compliance requires:
- Active GoAML registration with accurate, up-to-date transaction reporting
- Current AML Manual tailored to your specific business activity
- Business Risk Assessment (BRA) updated whenever your risk profile changes
- KYC, CDD, and Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) for every client and transaction
- Sanctions and PEP screening using a CBUAE-recognised tool (World-Check is the standard)
- Annual MoE Assessment submitted before the end of February each year
- Documented, recurring staff training covering red flags, KYC, and GoAML reporting
Miss any one of these consistently and your business carries real regulatory exposure — regardless of whether your underlying transactions are legitimate.
The Financial and Reputational Cost of Non-Compliance
Administrative fines under UAE AML law range from AED 50,000 to AED 5,000,000 per violation. In cases of serious negligence, the business owner or manager carries personal liability.
Beyond the financial penalty, the Ministry of Economy publishes the names of sanctioned entities publicly. A fine is not a private matter — it is a publicly visible record that affects:
- Client trust
- Banking relationships
- Licence renewals
- Investor confidence
The 2025 enforcement campaign made clear that the MoE is not issuing warnings before it acts. It is conducting inspections, identifying violations, and issuing fines in the same process.
With B-AML, your compliance is taken care of from GoAML registration to annual MoE submissions. We guarantee a complete, proactive compliance framework adapted to your sector — so your activities remain compliant, uninterrupted, and secure.
Not sure where you stand? Contact B-AML for a free compliance assessment.