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Last reviewed: 29 April 2026
Swiss asset manager AML 2026 crypto reporting obligations are converging on an unprecedented scale, driven by three parallel regulatory workstreams that every fund compliance officer, portfolio manager and in-house counsel must now address. The Transparency of Legal Entities Act (LETA) introduces a new beneficial-ownership register framework; the AMLA revision 2026 tightens customer due diligence and suspicious-activity reporting duties for managers of collective investment schemes; and the OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF), together with Switzerland’s own AEOI extension to crypto assets, creates an entirely new information-exchange layer, although timing remains uncertain. With institutions such as PostFinance announcing their first crypto asset management mandates and FINMA publishing dedicated custody guidance, the operational reality for asset management compliance in Switzerland has changed fundamentally.
Three regulatory instruments demand immediate attention from Swiss asset managers in 2026:
Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a compressed compliance window: managers should treat the period from now through late 2026 as preparation time, with full reporting obligations likely crystallising in early 2027 for crypto-specific AEOI.
| Date | Instrument / Act | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 12 January 2026 | FINMA Guidance 01/2026, Custody of crypto-based assets | Supervisory expectations for segregation, operational controls and due diligence when custodying crypto assets on behalf of clients. |
| 1 January 2026 (international context) | OECD CARF, early-adopter implementation date | Participating jurisdictions begin applying the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework; Switzerland’s domestic implementation timeline remains subject to the SIF position below. |
| 2026 (exact date pending) | Transparency of Legal Entities Act (LETA) | UBO register obligations enter into force for Swiss legal entities; fund structures must confirm beneficial-ownership data capture processes. |
| 2026 (ongoing) | AMLA revision 2026 | Enhanced CDD/EDD, broader obliged-entity definitions, stricter recordkeeping for fund managers. |
| Not before 1 January 2027 | AEOI on crypto assets (SIF position) | SIF states that the automatic exchange of information on crypto assets cannot be implemented before 1 January 2027; interim data-preparation steps recommended. |
| 16 February 2026 | PostFinance, first crypto asset management mandate | Market signal: institutional adoption of crypto asset mandates in Switzerland is accelerating. |
Given the timing ambiguity around CARF and AEOI crypto 2026, the prudent approach is to build data pipelines and reporting templates now, so they can be activated as soon as a final implementation date is confirmed by SIF or Parliament.
LETA introduces a register-based approach to fund UBO reporting in Switzerland, replacing the fragmented system in which beneficial-ownership information sat within individual subscription documents and anti-money-laundering files held by financial intermediaries. Under LETA, legal entities must identify their beneficial owners, report them to a designated register and keep the information current.
For collective investment schemes, whether structured as contractual funds, SICAVs or limited partnerships for collective investment, the obligations focus on identifying the natural persons who ultimately control or benefit from the entity or its management structure. Fund administrators and management companies must ensure that subscription processes capture the information required to populate the register and that material changes (such as a change of controlling shareholder in the management company) are reported within the prescribed timeframe.
Early indications suggest that penalties for non-compliance will include administrative fines and, in serious cases, restrictions on registry or supervisory standing. Managers should treat LETA 2026 as a data-quality project: review existing investor registers, map data gaps, and align subscription agreements with new disclosure requirements.
The AMLA revision 2026 strengthens the obligations that sit directly on asset managers as obliged entities. Key changes include:
These changes make it essential for managers to revisit their Swiss fund AML checklist, update internal policies and ensure that staff are trained on the new requirements before the revised provisions take full effect.
The OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) creates a global standard for the automatic exchange of information relating to crypto-asset transactions. It targets crypto-asset service providers, including exchanges, custodians and, in some cases, managers who facilitate transactions, and requires them to collect and report data on users’ crypto dispositions, transfers and holdings.
CARF is distinct from the existing AEOI framework for traditional financial accounts. While the existing AEOI covers bank accounts, securities accounts and insurance products, CARF extends the net to crypto assets that are not already captured, including decentralised-finance tokens, stablecoins and certain NFTs used as financial instruments.
For Swiss asset managers, the practical implication is information mapping: determine which crypto holdings fall within CARF scope, identify which entity in the fund chain (manager, custodian, depositary or VASP) holds the reportable data, and build pipelines to aggregate and transmit that data when reporting obligations commence. Given SIF’s position that implementation cannot begin before 1 January 2027, the current period is an essential preparation window.
The following Swiss fund AML checklist is structured in three priority phases. Each item includes a responsible function and a sample policy action.
| Week | Activity | Owner | Deliverable |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1–2 | AML policy gap analysis (including crypto risk matrix) | Compliance | Gap-analysis report |
| 3–4 | UBO data extraction and LETA field comparison | Legal / Fund Admin | UBO remediation register |
| 5–6 | Reporting-flow data mapping (CARF + AMLA fields) | Tax / Compliance | Data-map document |
| 7–8 | Vendor / custodian contract review against FINMA 01/2026 | Legal / Operations | Contract amendment tracker |
| 9–10 | IT taxonomy build + data-retention audit | IT / Operations | Holdings taxonomy and retention policy |
| 11–12 | Staff training + escalation-plan sign-off | HR / Compliance | Training log and updated AML manual |
The scope of Swiss asset manager AML 2026 crypto reporting obligations varies depending on the legal structure and regulatory status of the entity. The following comparison table summarises the position for the most common fund structures and service-provider roles.
| Entity Type | Reporting Obligations (LETA / AMLA / AEOI-CARF) | Immediate Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Swiss collective investment scheme (contractual fund, SICAV, LP for collective investment) | UBO disclosure under LETA (identify beneficial owners and managing entities); AMLA duties for the manager as obliged entity; possible CARF reporting where the manager acts as reporting agent or engages a VASP for crypto transactions. | Confirm UBO extraction method from fund register; update subscription documents with LETA-compliant disclosure fields; designate a reporting lead for each fund. |
| Regulated asset manager (portfolio manager / manager of collective assets) | Full AMLA compliance (KYC, CDD, EDD); obliged entity for suspicious-activity reporting; may be required to supply information to tax/AEOI data flows for crypto-asset mandates. | Update AML policies to reflect crypto-specific risk factors; align KYC onboarding with revised CDD requirements; verify AML officer appointment and escalation process. |
| Custodian / depositary (including crypto custody) | FINMA Guidance 01/2026 operational and segregation requirements for crypto-based assets; reporting-support obligations to the manager under contractual arrangements. | Amend custody agreements to meet FINMA segregation standards; grant audit rights; provide proof of reserves and wallet-level data access. |
| Asset manager managing separate accounts (discretionary mandates) | AMLA obligations as financial intermediary; LETA may apply at the client-entity level; CARF reporting may be triggered where the manager facilitates crypto transactions on behalf of clients. | Map client-entity UBO data against LETA requirements; include crypto-specific clauses in investment management agreements; prepare data pipelines for CARF fields. |
For open-ended funds and SICAVs with large, frequently changing investor bases, the UBO data-capture challenge is most acute. Managers should consider integrating automated investor-register checks and periodic LETA verification sweeps into their fund-administration workflows.
As crypto asset mandates expand in Switzerland, managers must adapt their onboarding and monitoring infrastructure to address the unique risks and data requirements of digital assets.
Traditional KYC collects identity documents, source-of-wealth declarations and tax-residency confirmations. For crypto investments, the following additional fields are essential:
Managers should tune their AML transaction-monitoring systems to accommodate on-chain data. This includes integrating third-party blockchain-analytics tools that can flag high-risk wallet interactions, exposure to sanctioned addresses and patterns associated with mixing or tumbling services.
Red flags that should trigger enhanced due diligence or a SAR include:
Each SAR for crypto must include transaction details (hash, timestamp, amount), counterparty wallet addresses, and supporting KYC documentation. Managers should ensure their reporting templates capture these fields alongside the narrative explanation required by the Money Laundering Reporting Office (MROS).
FINMA Guidance 01/2026 on the custody of crypto-based assets sets clear supervisory expectations for operational controls, asset segregation and due diligence when holding crypto on behalf of clients. Managers selecting or retaining custody providers must evaluate their arrangements against these standards.
When onboarding or reviewing a custodian or VASP counterparty, the following minimum due-diligence criteria apply:
Under the AMLA revision 2026, managers must retain all KYC records, transaction-monitoring alerts, SAR filings and supporting documentation for a minimum period following the end of the business relationship. For crypto-specific records, this extends to:
Managers should implement tamper-proof logging (e.g., write-once storage or cryptographic hash chains) for these records, ensuring they meet evidentiary standards for regulatory examinations and external audits.
The convergence of LETA, the AMLA revision 2026 and the AEOI/CARF crypto reporting framework creates the most significant compliance step-change for asset management compliance in Switzerland in over a decade. The three highest-priority actions for every Swiss asset manager are: first, update AML policies and risk assessments to cover crypto-specific exposures; second, complete a UBO gap analysis against LETA requirements; and third, build CARF-ready data pipelines now, even while the final AEOI implementation date remains subject to confirmation. Managers who act decisively in this preparation window will be positioned to meet their obligations without disruption when reporting goes live.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sandro Mägerli at Nastra Attorneys At Law Ltd., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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