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The overhaul of AML law Mauritius practitioners have anticipated for several years is now a live compliance event. The Anti‑Money Laundering, Combatting the Financing of Terrorism and Countering Proliferation Financing Bill 2026, widely referred to as AMLA 2026, materially expands customer due diligence, beneficial‑ownership disclosure and reporting obligations across the entire financial‑services chain. For banks, non‑bank lenders, fund sponsors and corporate borrowers involved in cross‑border financing through Mauritius, the new regime demands immediate changes to transaction workflows, facility documentation and internal compliance infrastructure. This guide translates the legislative and supervisory changes into a practical, step‑by‑step playbook that compliance officers, in‑house counsel and relationship managers can apply to deals in progress and pipeline transactions today.
AMLA 2026 is not a cosmetic update. It restructures the AML/CFT framework that has governed Mauritius since the Financial Intelligence and Anti‑Money Laundering Act (FIAMLA) was enacted, and it layers in an entirely new countering‑proliferation‑financing (CPF) pillar. Every party to a Mauritius‑linked financing, from the arranging bank to the corporate borrower to the management company administering a fund SPV, must act now.
Three immediate actions for every deal team:
Key takeaways by role:
Anti‑money laundering law in Mauritius has evolved through a series of legislative and regulatory reforms anchored by FIAMLA. Originally enacted to bring the jurisdiction in line with the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Recommendations, FIAMLA established the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), defined Reporting Persons and introduced the suspicious‑transaction reporting framework that underpins bank compliance Mauritius‑wide. Subsequent amendments, notably the miscellaneous AML/CFT/CPF provisions enacted in the 2023–2025 reform cycle, progressively expanded CDD obligations, introduced risk‑based supervisory approaches and responded to findings from FATF mutual evaluations.
AMLA 2026 represents the most comprehensive consolidation to date. It codifies the AML/CFT/CPF triad into a single, integrated legislative instrument, replaces or amends several stand‑alone provisions scattered across FIAMLA and subordinate regulations, and introduces new enforcement tools, including faster administrative penalty procedures and mandatory electronic beneficial‑ownership reporting, that directly affect how cross‑border financing Mauritius transactions are structured and documented.
Three regulators share supervisory responsibility under the new framework, and each has issued or is expected to issue sector‑specific guidance:
Legislative timeline, key dates:
| Date / Period | Event |
|---|---|
| 2002 | FIAMLA enacted, establishes FIU, defines Reporting Persons, introduces STR framework |
| 2018 | FIAMLA Regulations updated, enhanced CDD requirements for financial institutions |
| 2023–2025 | Miscellaneous AML/CFT/CPF provisions enacted, progressive tightening of BO disclosure, risk‑based supervision and sanctions screening |
| 2026 | AMLA 2026, consolidated AML/CFT/CPF Bill passes; new reporting thresholds, electronic BO registry, administrative penalty regime and CPF obligations take effect |
The changes introduced by the AML CFT CPF Bill are extensive, but five categories have the most immediate impact on cross‑border lending, fund finance and security packages Mauritius practitioners handle daily.
AMLA 2026 widens the universe of entities and individuals classified as Reporting Persons. Professional trustees, corporate‑service providers and management companies administering fund SPVs now carry explicit, primary reporting obligations, not merely derivative obligations through the licensed entities they serve. Industry observers expect this change to require management companies to build standalone compliance infrastructure rather than relying on the compliance function of the underlying fund or bank.
The threshold for identifying ultimate beneficial owners has been recalibrated. Institutions must now verify the identity of every natural person who directly or indirectly owns or controls a prescribed percentage of a legal entity or arrangement, and must do so using independent, reliable sources. The electronic BO registry requirement mandates that verified beneficial‑ownership data be submitted to, and maintained on, a centralised register, a significant operational shift for Mauritius SPVs that previously relied on self‑declarations held by registered agents.
For the first time, countering proliferation financing is codified as a standalone compliance obligation alongside AML and CFT. Banks and other Reporting Persons must implement targeted financial sanctions screening for proliferation financing, maintain CPF‑specific risk assessments and report any suspected CPF activity to the FIU through the same STR channel used for AML/CFT matters. This is particularly relevant for lenders with exposure to borrowers operating in sectors or geographies flagged under UN Security Council proliferation‑related resolutions.
The shift to electronic reporting and registration, including the new BO registry, imposes technology and process requirements on every Reporting Person. Reporting timelines for STRs and other prescribed filings have been tightened, meaning compliance teams must be resourced and authorised to act faster.
AMLA 2026 introduces a graduated administrative‑penalty regime that empowers the BOM and FSC to impose financial penalties without the delays of criminal proceedings. Penalties escalate with the severity and duration of the breach, and enforcement timelines have been compressed, a material change for institutions accustomed to lengthy regulatory dialogue before any sanction is applied.
Reporting obligations by entity type, comparison table:
| Entity Type | New / Changed Obligation Under AMLA 2026 | Practical Impact for Lenders |
|---|---|---|
| Mauritian banks / licensed FIs | Enhanced CDD at onboarding and ongoing review; CPF screening mandatory; shortened STR reporting windows; administrative penalties for non‑compliance | Lenders must obtain enhanced BO evidence before drawdown; update sanctions‑screening systems to include CPF lists; ensure compliance teams can file STRs within the new timelines |
| Funds / fund managers | Explicit Reporting Person designation for management companies and administrators; sponsor and GP disclosure duties expanded; LP investor CDD to higher standard | Lenders to require GP and administrator AML compliance covenants in facility agreements; request direct BO confirmations for each LP above the prescribed threshold |
| Mauritian SPVs / trustees | Expanded BO reporting to electronic registry; trustee duties increased to include CPF risk assessment; periodic re‑verification required | Lenders to require more frequent BO certifications and trustee compliance undertakings as conditions subsequent; include registry‑filing evidence in CP / CS schedules |
| Corporate borrowers | Source‑of‑funds and source‑of‑wealth declarations required for higher‑risk transactions; PEP screening extended to beneficial owners | Borrowers must prepare comprehensive document packs pre‑signing; lenders to build AMLA compliance certification into drawdown CPs |
| Professional trustees / CS providers | Standalone Reporting Person status; obligation to maintain and update BO information independently; direct liability for filing failures | Lenders can no longer rely solely on the CS provider’s general confirmation, must obtain and verify underlying BO data independently |
The practical effect of AMLA 2026 is that every bank and non‑bank lender active in Mauritius must recalibrate three layers of its operations: governance and policy, transaction‑level workflows, and the documents it requires from counterparties.
Every institution’s AML/CFT program must now be expanded to cover CPF. This is not a matter of adding a paragraph to an existing policy manual, it requires a distinct CPF risk assessment, dedicated or integrated screening against proliferation‑related sanctions lists, and training for front‑line staff. Boards and senior management must formally approve the updated program and allocate resources.
Deal teams should embed AMLA 2026 compliance checkpoints at four stages of every transaction:
Lenders should update their standard CP and CS schedules to require the following additional items from borrowers and sponsors:
This section provides a granular checklist that lenders and borrowers can use to confirm readiness for transactions governed by anti‑money laundering Mauritius requirements under the new regime.
AMLA 2026 requires enhanced due diligence where a counterparty presents higher ML/TF/PF risk. Triggers include:
For each trigger, lenders must document the additional measures taken, including senior‑management approval of the business relationship, enhanced ongoing monitoring frequency and source‑of‑wealth verification, and retain records for the prescribed period.
Facility agreements should include representations such as:
Due diligence document matrix, by counterparty type:
| Document Required | Corporate Borrower | Fund SPV | Trustee | Fund Manager |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Certified corporate ownership chart | Yes | Yes | Yes (trust deed + protector details) | Yes |
| BO registry extract (electronic) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Identification of each UBO (ID + proof of address) | Yes | Yes (including LPs above threshold) | Yes (settlor, beneficiaries, protector) | Yes (shareholders + key controllers) |
| Source‑of‑funds declaration (transaction‑specific) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| PEP self‑declaration | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| AML/CFT/CPF compliance certificate | Yes | Yes (from administrator) | Yes | Yes |
| Bearer share remediation evidence | If applicable | If applicable | N/A | If applicable |
| Sanctions‑screening clearance confirmation | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Fund finance Mauritius transactions, including subscription‑line facilities secured against LP capital commitments and NAV facilities supported by portfolio assets, face a dual compliance challenge under AMLA 2026. First, the fund’s management company and administrator are now standalone Reporting Persons, meaning they must conduct and document their own CDD on investors independently of the GP. Second, lenders providing subscription lines must satisfy themselves that the fund’s LP investor base has been screened against the enhanced CDD and CPF standards before the facility is committed.
Practically, this means:
Enforcement of security packages Mauritius lenders hold, charges over shares, assignments of receivables, pledges of bank accounts, may be affected where the security‑grantor or any entity in the enforcement chain is subject to an active STR, regulatory inquiry or administrative penalty proceeding under AMLA 2026. The likely practical effect is that lenders will need to build compliance “clean‑bill” confirmations into their enforcement documentation.
Clauses to consider adding or amending in security and granting documents:
Lead arrangers of syndicated facilities with a Mauritius nexus must build AMLA 2026 compliance coordination into the intercreditor architecture. Each syndicate member is independently a Reporting Person (where licensed in Mauritius) or subject to equivalent home‑jurisdiction AML obligations, but the lead arranger carries de facto coordination responsibility.
Specific adjustments to consider:
If an institution or its counterparty is the subject of a regulatory inquiry, enforcement notice or administrative penalty proceeding under AMLA 2026, the following immediate steps should be taken:
AMLA 2026 is not a future compliance project, it is a present‑day deal condition. Every bank, lender, fund sponsor and borrower with a Mauritius nexus should execute three steps immediately: first, update all internal AML/CFT policies to integrate CPF obligations and align CDD processes with the enhanced beneficial‑ownership verification standards; second, amend facility agreements, security documents and intercreditor arrangements to embed AMLA 2026 representations, covenants and compliance conditions; and third, resource compliance teams to meet the shortened reporting timelines and engage with the electronic BO registry. Early action protects transactions, avoids administrative penalties and preserves access to Mauritius as a cross‑border financing jurisdiction.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jean-François Boisvenu at Eversheds Sutherland (Mauritius), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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