General Laws Amendment Bill 2025 - Public Comment on AML/CFT Reforms
Summary
South Africa's National Treasury has published the draft General Laws (Anti-Money Laundering and Combating Terrorism Financing) Amendment Bill, 2025 for public comment through Government Gazette No. 53955. The Bill proposes amendments to four pieces of legislation including the Financial Intelligence Centre Act, Financial Sector Regulation Act, Companies Act, and Nonprofit Organisations Act to address AML/CFT deficiencies identified in the 2021 FATF Mutual Evaluation Report. Public comments are due 13 February 2026.
What changed
The draft Bill proposes amendments to four South African laws to strengthen the country's AML/CFT framework in preparation for the FATF Mutual Evaluation commencing mid-2026. Key changes include: amendments to FIC Act sections 26A, 26B, 28A, and 51A addressing targeted financial sanctions; expansion of section 40 to authorize FIC information sharing with the Public Procurement Office and Border Management Authority; provisions for lifestyle audits; section 42 addressing new technology deficiencies; and section 46 addressing customer due diligence for anonymous clients. The Bill also amends the Nonprofit Organisations Act section 30 regarding penalties, Companies Act sections 82 and 175 regarding beneficial ownership sanctions, and Financial Sector Regulation Act sections 2, 3, 58, 106, 108, 111, 131, and 135 regarding customer protection and licensing.
Affected parties including financial institutions, companies, nonprofits, and NGOs should prepare for enhanced compliance obligations once enacted. The amendments will require updates to AML/CFT policies, customer due diligence procedures, beneficial ownership disclosure practices, and internal controls to align with the strengthened regulatory framework targeting FATF compliance gaps identified during South Africa's greylist exit process.
What to do next
- Submit public comments on the draft Bill by 13 February 2026
- Assess proposed amendments to the FIC Act including sanctions, information sharing, and customer due diligence provisions
- Review changes to beneficial ownership obligations under the Companies Act and licensing requirements under the Financial Sector Regulation Act
Archived snapshot
Apr 7, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
National Treasury has published the draft General Laws (Anti-Money Laundering and Combating Terrorism Financing) Amendment Bill, 2025 for public comment, as conveyed in Government Notice No. 6997 in Government Gazette No. 53955 that was published on 14 January 2026. The Bill can be accessed on the National Treasury website (www.treasury.gov.za). The due date for submitting public comments is 13 February 2026. The draft Bill is an updated version of the draft General Laws (Anti-Money Laundering and Combating Terrorism Financing) Amendment Bill, 2024 that was published for public comment on 13 December 2024 as conveyed in Government Notice No. 5683 in Government Gazette No. 51772. National Treasury subsequently expanded on the draft Bill to incorporate amendments related to non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and the conducting of lifestyle audits to continue
strengthening the country's AML/CFT system. These additions will better prepare the country for the
next FATF Mutual Evaluation for South Africa that will commence in mid-2026 and conclude in October 2027. The draft Bill seeks to strengthen the country's AML/CFT system by addressing the remaining deficiencies identified in the 2021 FATF Mutual Evaluation Report for South Africa, and also during the remedial process that culminated in South Africa exiting the FATF greylist in October 2025. The draft Amendment Bill was developed together with the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition, the Department of Social Development, the Financial Intelligence Centre, and financial sector regulators (Prudential Authority and Financial Sector Conduct Authority). It proposes amendments to four pieces of legislation that fall under the administrative responsibilities of different Ministers, namely:
- the Financial Intelligence Centre Act, 2001: Minister of Finance;
- the Financial Sector Regulation Act, 2017: Minister of Finance;
- the Companies Act, 2008: Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition; and
the Nonprofit Organisations Act, 1997: Minister of Social Development.
The sections of the above laws that would be amended in the draft Amendment Bill, if enacted, are the following:Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) Act to deal with minor deficiencies relating to targeted
financial sanctions in sections 26A, 26B, 28A and 51A;Section 40 of the FIC Act to allow the FIC to share information with the Public Procurement
Office and the Border Management Authority;
PUBLICATION FOR COMMENT: DRAFT GENERAL LAWS (ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING AND COMBATING TERRORISM FINANCING) AMENDMENT BILL, 2025
Section 40 of the FIC Act to authorise the FIC to share information it obtains through
conducting lifestyle audits;Section 41A of the FIC Act to expand the sections of the Act that the protection of personal
information apply with regard to the Protection of Personal Information Act, 2013;Section 42 of the FIC Act to address minor deficiencies identified with respect to new
technologies;Section 46 of the FIC Act to address a deficiency relating to customer due diligence measures
for anonymous clients;Section 30 of the Nonprofit Organisations Act to specify the maximum amount of the fine and
years of imprisonment in respect of an offence in terms of the Act;Sections 82 and 175 of the Companies Act, 2008 to address deficiencies related to the
application of remedial actions and/or dissuasive and proportionate sanctions for non- compliance with beneficial ownership obligations;Sections 2, 3, 58, 106, 108, 111, 131 and 135 of the Financial Sector Regulation Act to close
gaps in the protection of financial sector customers, and licensing and regulations for market conduct and anti-money laundering, and to strengthen licensing and enforcement powers; andOther technical amendments related to strengthening the country's anti-money laundering
and anti-corruption laws. Process to be followed following the receipt of public comments on the draft Bill Upon the receipt of written comments, the National Treasury, the Department of Social Development, the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition, the Financial Intelligence Centre and the financial sector regulators will consider the written comments on the draft Amendment Bill and make appropriate revisions to the published Bill for submission to Cabinet and for subsequent tabling in Parliament. Due date for public comments on the 2025 draft Amendment Bill Please forward written comments to the National Treasury at Commentdraftlegislation@treasury.gov.za by close of business on 13 February 2026. The General Laws (Anti-Money Laundering and Combating Terrorism Financing) Amendment Bill, 2025 can be accessed on the National Treasury website (www.treasury.gov.za).
Issued by National Treasury Date: 15 January 2026
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